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                  <text>,10) -The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 9, 1976

IIOSPITAL NEWS
Vdenu Hotpltal

Suspension
~~~~~::=·~ker·polict·es adopte
Holzer Medleal Cenltr

ADMISSIONS - Millie
Blake, Weal Columbia ;
Donna Jean Aleshire , Geloma Binkley, Winifred
Syracuse ; Mary Searlea, Cooper, Anna Goskey, Mason
RACINE - The Soufllern a removal under this division',
Cbelltlre; Marilyn Powell, Grlnun, Mrs. Olarles HID
the teacher shall. upon
and
son,
Emma
Hinerman
Local
School Board has request, be given In writing
Racine;
James
See,
a policy governing the
1
Mineravllle; Eameat Quillen, U oyd Hoff man, Mare ha' adopted
the procedures for the
reasons or such rein·
SyraCUIIl; David Pierce Jr. Holsi1111er, J ennIfer HIIih~. suspension and upulslon of statement.
D. The superintendent or
Pomeroy; Patty Harmon, Goldie Hunt, Mary Hurl, Sue students. The policy also prlnclpel shall within twentyexpectations on four hours after the lime of a
RuUand; Margaret Bislell, Johnson, Mildred Litton, outlinesbehavior.
Long Bottom ; Sharon Riggs, Gl adys Miller, Flora Ml t- student
Following
are
the pupil 's · expulsion
or
notify In writing,
Rutland; Rebecca Hess, chell , l)onald Mootz, Gil grovl&amp;lons passed by the suspension,
the parent guardian or
Pomeroy ; Unda Young, NeaI • HOUan d PrOliO, Will) am
O!lr d:
custodian otlhe pupil, and the
A. The surorlntendent of clerk of the board of
Pomeroy; Walter Green, Pugh, James Rees, Earl
Saunders
Donald
Skaggs
the
Southern ocal Schools or education of such expulsion
VInton;· Coy Starcher Jr .,
'
.
'
the principal of a Southern
T
Mrs.
James
Souders
and
School
may suspend a pupil or suspension. he notice
Pomeroy and · Theresa
daughter, Irene St. Clair, from &amp;ehoollor not more than shall Include the reasons for
Fisher, Minersville .
h
the expulsion or suspenslpn
DISCHARGES - John Emma Stewart Rosalle 1en sc 001 days. No pupil ·and shall also lncl ude
Stewart Mary Strickland shall ·be suspended unless notification of the rl~ht of the
White and Vera Drehel.
•
• prior to the suspension such
II
h
. Barbara Taylor • John superintendent or principal: pup or Is paron s. guarJ
Thom"••n, Olarles Thorn·
(1) Give the pupil written dian. or custodian to appeal
,
e'~ u
,......
such action to the board of
loo, Mayrnle Turner, Patty notice of the In1enllon to education or to Its designee,
' .
Wolford.
suspend h..n and the reasons. to be represented In all such
1fl8ke&amp; Cerfarn
(Births, Sept. 8)
~'::d the Intended suspension ; appeal. proceedings, to be
Mr. and Mrs . James
(2) Provide~ the pupil an granted a hearing before the
board
Its delsgnee
..... o S ria.
Parson, son Pomeroy · Mr. oppor t unl ty to appear a1 an to
be orheard
againstIn order
such
""HI
• ~·
and. Mrs. Ro•naid Collins,' son, Informal
hearing
before
the
1
principal, fiSSistant principal, suspens on or expulsion. and
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs . . super 1 n tend en! , or to request that such hearing
BURLINGTON , Colo . RonlildAdklns,son,Oak Hill ·, superintendent's desl•nee be held In executive session.
E. A PURII or his parents,
(UP!) - Jim Gemhart, 99, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gillman and challonge the reason• for guardian,
or custodian may
,says he wouldn't be caught
• the Intended supsenslon or
1 h
Bid
II
son,
we
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
otherwise
to·
explain
hlo
appea
Is expulsion or
&lt;lead in this eastern Colorado Bruce Davison, daughter, actions.
suspension by a ·superln· town, but he has spent a Q-own City·, Mr. and !\Irs.
B. The su""rlnlendent of ·tendent or principal to the
,... Schools may .designee
board of education or to Its
quarter of a century staging Claud McDermitt, daughter, southern Local
. Such pupil or his
tfuneral parties for himself. Point Pleasant W Va · Mr expel a pupil from school. No parent,
guardian,
or
Concerned that he wouldn't
• · ·•
· pupil shall be expelled unalss
1 dl
and
Mrs
.
Gary
Cropper'
prior
to
his
expulsion,
such
cus
o
an
may
be
get a . proper burial, the daughter, Summerville, w. superintendent:
represented In all such ap·
retired farmer began holding Va.
(1 1 Give the pupil and his peal r,roceedlngs and shall be
parent,
guardian,
or gran ed a hearing before file
funerals for himself In 1951
custodian written notice of board or Its designee In order
and has had more than 20
the Intention to expel the to be heard ~gatnst such
Since, it becoming the town's
pupil ; and
suspension or expulsion. At
major annual event. He hold
(2) Provides the pupil and the r~uesl ofthe pupil. or his
the nell one Sunday.
his parent. guardian. paron •
guardian
or
GRASSO ON TAXES
custodian, or representative custodian. or attorney, the
For the first funeral, Gemty
board or Its designee may
OXFORD, Conn. (UPI) hart spent $l5;000 which Gov. Ella T. Grasso says she an oppor 1unl 1o appear In hold the hearing In executive
person before the superln- session, but shall act uincluded purchase of a copper wants to improve the tax lendent
or his designee to
h
,... '
casket, rental of the local structure to help make challenge the reasons for the sue suspension or expulsion
urmory and a widely Conne.ctictlt business and Intended expulsion or only at a public meeting . The
to explain the board may, by a . majority
attended party. The casket ·Industry ·more competitive otherwise
pupil's actions . . The notice . vote of Its lull membership or
has Since been shipped to with companies In other required In this division shall by the action of Its designee,
. KWU18s, where Gernhart says states.
Include the reasons for the affirm the order of suspenslon or expulsion or may
~e will be buried because, "I
1n en d e d
expu I s lon. reinstate such pupil or
"Further business tax cuts
'
wouldn't be caught dead in cannot be promised at this notification
of the opportunity otherwise reverse. vacate, or
of the pupil, and his parent, modify the · order of
Burlington."
,
liine," she said Wednesday,' guardian. custodian. or
Gernhert said he is holding In a speech to the Smaller representative
to appear suspension w excpulslon . No
the celell'Biion before his Manufacturers ABsodation of before the superintendent or pupil shall be suspended or
tOOth birthday on Nov. 20 the Greater Waterbury Area. his designee fo challenge the expelled from any school
reasons for the Intended beyond the current semester.
because he doesn 'I "want to "But you may be SID'e that If
th
The. board or IIs designee
II ·
disappoint pe9ple" by dying existing taxes continue to expu son or 0 erwlse to shall make a verbatim record
the ~upll's action, of hearing held under this
before another funeral party. produce increasing revenues, explain
and notification of the time division. The decision of the
place to appear. The lime board or Its designee may be
and if controlled spending and
to appear shall not be earlier a~ led under .C_hapter 2506
. •
can be maintained, the cuts fila I three nor later then five ,,....
days aft.r the notice Is given. of the Revised Code. This
will be m!lde."
unless the superintendent .sec;tlon shall not be .conslrued
Thundershowers Ukely thl.s
vrants an extension of lime at to require notice &amp;nd hearing
the requestoflhe pupil. or his in accordance wlfll division
afternoon and tonight. Lows
panent, guardian. custOdian, A, B. or Cof this section In fbe
tonight In the upper 50s.
or representative. If an ex- case of normal disciplinary
Showers ending Friday, then
t 1 1
1 d fl
procedures In which a pupil Is
ens on s gran e • er removed from a curricular or
cooler with highs In the lower CIIAltGES D,ROPPED
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
glvln~· the original notice, the extra curricular activity for a
7011. Probabllity of rain Ia 60
super nlendent · shall notify period of less than twenty.
per cent today, 70 per cent ~tor Ryan O'Neal no longer the pupil and his parent,
custodian, or four hours and Is flo! sublect
tonight and 50 per cent faces ·prosecution for . guardian,
representall,ve of the new to suspension or expuls on.
Friday.
posaesslon of marijuana.
lime and place to appear.
F. A teacher may remove a
O'Neal was arrested Jan. 7 . c. If a pupil's presence slydent from the · classroom .
by officers who arrived at his poses a continuing danger to for • period of twenty-four
home with a search warrant persons or properly or an hours wlfllout the notice or
and found five ounces of ongoing threat of disrupting hearing requirements. If •
the academic process iaklng student
commits
the
Starting Sept. 13th
marijuana in a jar in his place either within a fotlow':J acts. he may be
bedr~m.
classroom or elsewhere on rleem_!Y f from cllodass f~Y a
HOURS
Atthereconunendatiot\ofa the school premises. the
a, ..er or a per · o lime
batlo offi
superintendent, or a prln- not to exceed ten school days
9:00-3:00
pro
n
cer, a Superior clpal, or assistant prlnclpel except In fllose instances
Phone 992-l:ios
Court Judge Wednesday dis- may remove 1 pupil from where the student 15 to be
missed th e charge because curricular or extracurricular expelled.
(I) Reiusal to participate In
O'Neal completed a six- activities or from file &amp;ehool classroom activities assigned
month drug education premises. and a teacher may by the teacher.
pupil from
program, th e common remove
curricular'
or
extra- . (21 Relusal to accept and
169 N. 2nd. St.
procedur~ for first offenders curricular activities under complete lndlviclual
arrested on mjnor charges. his supervision, without file assignments by the teacher.
Middleport,
11
d
h
(3) Ongolnv ""havloi' which
no ce
an · earlng dlsupls or threatens to
requirements'of diviSion A or disrupt classroom activities.
'r'~~-·•IH_......,.....~---..,-••••&lt;1 B of lhls section. As soon IS
G. Students who commit
practicable after making the following acts while at
COLORS: •RED CEDAR
such a removal, the teacher &amp;ehool,onaschoolbus,orata
shall submit In writing to file &amp;ehool sponsored activity will
principal the reasons.for such be suspended from the at.
.•DROM EDARY
removal. If • pupil Is tendance of regular 5chool
removed under this division and all school sponsored
(BAGS TO MATCH) from
a curricular or extracurricular activity or . from activities for the maximum
.the school premises. written period of lime provided by
ORC 3313 .66 and ORC
notice of the hearing and of 3313 _661 . The maximum
the reason for the removal
shall be given to the purcll a. s period of lime for which a
student can be suspended
soon as practicable pr or to from attend!~ school Is for
the hearing. which shall be
...
helcl within seventy-two hours len &amp;ehool days.
from the Initial removal Is
(1) Unauthorized smoking.
ordered. The hearing shall be
(2) P!lyslcal assault upon
held within accordance with another student.
Division A of this section
(3) Willful marring or
unless It Is probable fila! file defacing school property.
pupil may be sublecl to ex(4) Theft of another's
pu,fslon, In which ca!le a personal properly.
hearing In accordance with
(5) Acts of -Insubordination
division
e·
; this section shall or defiance toward a teacher
0
The- simplicity an~ refined·lines of this dress casual pump,
be he'ld, except that the or administrator.
!"lakes it a versatile wardrobe addition. Handsome stitchhearing shall be helcl within
H. Students who commit
Ing over t~e t~ line adds an elegant touch to the silkee
seventy-two hors of the Initial the following acts while at
brushed p1gskm . And Hush Puppies• Casuars are born
removal. The Individual who &amp;ehool, on aschool bus. or at a ·
comfortable .. . just for you .
ordered, caused, or r::;estecl school sponsored activity will
be expelled from the atthe remova I 0 be ma 1 sh• II fonda
nee of reular school and
be present at' the hearing.
If the superintendent or the all school sponsored acprlnclpal reinstates a pupil In llvllles for the maximum
a curricular or ex· l'frlod of lime provided by
3313.66 and ORC
lr acurr Icu Ior aoI lvl ty under ORC_6&lt;11.
The maximum
3313
the teacher's supervision period of lime for which 1
.....,. ....,.............................................~pr...lor••'o-lhe
...h•ea•..r,.rn4g••f-.o~l•lo:.,w,l•n;..g student can be e~pelled from
•
attending school Is for the
remainder of the semester
fila! school Is In session at the
lime of lha expulsion.
(1) VIolation of drug abuse
policy.
(2) Physical assault upon
anr school employee. .
3)
Unauthorized
possession at school of any
firearm or object designed to
Inflict physical harm.
W Willful destruction of
school prC&gt;JoOrty.
(s1 Theft of school

'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Break in Meigs school strike hinted

PRE-SEASON
COAT SALE

An aii- of optimllm towarda the aettlealent ol 1 leKbera

strike In the M~s Local School Dillrlct appeared Thunday
nlsht when the district's board 11 education met for Ill third
special sesalon this week.
·
During the "open" pm of the mae~ &amp;lpt Olarlea
Qowler said rtprllltentatlwa of the Meigs Local Teachers
Man., the Ohio Educatlm A'Fdatlon, and the board d
education will meet IO!I&amp;Y to dltlc!1lM aettlement 11 the strike
whl~h moved into ill fourtb Clay thll morning.

R _.. . : __ fi·..rmer
b ' ['

OUR ENTIRE STOCK
MISS£S.JUNIORSM.f SIZES •
PRE TEEN • GIRLS
·FALL COATS

AU. AT SALE PRICES DURING THIS 2 DAY SALE

JACKET SALE
MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPT., 1ST FLOOR -

{N~;;;;··~---·.·-:::·:--.:-,i~--:-n~i;!~

OF STYLES IN WAIST LENGTH AND CAR COAT LENGTH JACKETS

. TEAM SUPPORTED - Rain and a teachers 1 strike
didn't stop the Meigs High Cheerleaders from staging a
.bonfire and pep rally .Thuraday night at the Country
Cousinl parking lot. Here, cheerleaders lead the Meigs
fight song ·to'support the Marauders football team, which
. this week has faced more adversity than just tonight's
opponent, Pl. Pleasant. See pages 5-S-.7~ today.

Dedication
of bridge
is Tuesday

SIZES
8 TO 20
JUNIOR BOYS SIZES
3 TO 7

Dedication of the Keno
Bridge will be held Tuesday,
4 p.m. at the bridge site.
."Professor" Robert
Morris, will serve as master
Of ceremonies with Dale
Warner,
co-chairman.
Ribbon cutting ceremonies
W!U be under the supervision
of Ted Reed and N. W. Compt~n, professional ribbon
cutters. Cutting the ribbon
Will be Mary Lew Johnson,
and Wesley Buehl, county
engineer.
The Meigs County senior
citizen choir will be the
featured entertainment
under the direction of Carrie
!j~utzling. One of the choir's
selections will be "Shall We
Galher~t. the River.'"

MEN'S JACKETS
FOR FALL AND WINTER

to
policy

SIZES 32 to 50

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT

September ?th

EXaWNT SELECTION

NOT OPEN

BAHR
·
c
LOTHIERS
Md)DUPORT .
M2-2351
\

Fri .. Sat. &amp; Sun.
Sept. 10-11-12
THE BREAKING POINT
8o Suenson, Robert Culp,
Ballnda J . Montgomery.

"R"

Show starts at 1

SPECIAL SAL£ PRICES FOR FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
MEN'S SIZES 36' TO 46' EXTRA lARGE SIZES 48 TO 54 - BOYS

M~

TO MEASURE.DRAPERIES FOR YOUR HOME

NOW 0~ SALE AT
HO.ME

.

3'0% OFF
ANNEX

The sampling begins
Monday at Dashields lock
and dam In the Pittsburgh,
Pa .', area and will be
comPleted Oct. 6 at
Smithfield, Ky., near the
mouth of lhe Cumberland
River.
Samples .also are to be
taken Sept. 14at Martinsville,
W.Va., Sept. 15 at Wheeling
Island, Sept. 16 at Crab Creek
In Mason County, W. Va.,
Sept. 17 at Gallipolis, Ohio,
Sept. 20 at Neville, Ohio, Sept.
21 just below Warsaw, Ky.,
Sept. 22 at McAlpin launching
ramp at Shawnie Park, ()(;t. 4
at Cannelton, Ind., and Oct. 5
at Shawneetown, W.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 102

RECEIVE SCHOLARSHIPS - These four nursing students at Holzer Medical Center
were named winners of $300 scholarships awarded by the Meigs County chapter of the
March of Dimes. The awards were made Wednesday night at the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. The winners were evaluated on the basis of scholastic ability, personal
character, 6nancial need, and a health study area d pre-natal nursing. From the left are
Crystal Glaze, Mary Rusche!, Deborah L.ynn Saunders and Mrs. Mickey Williams,
treasurer of the Meigs County chapter of the March of Dimes, who made the presentation of
the scholarships.

169 die in

.

and Warehouse Open Friday Until 8, Saturday Until 5

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
.."'

ASK TOWED ·
Filing for a marriage
license In Meigs County
Probate Court Thuraday
were Harold Eu&amp;ene Clark,
41. Rl. I, Athens, to VIcky
Lynn Ruffner, 24, Rt. 2,
Albany.

I

By United Presslntemadooal
NEW DELHI, INDIA - A LONE IUJACKER Friday
commandeered an Indian Airlines jetliner carrying 84 persons
on a flishl from New Delhi to Bombay and forced it to land In
Lshore, Pakistan. Airline officials said . the hiJacker
apparently wanted to fly to Ubya .
·
The officials said the Doting 737 carried 77 passengers and
a crew of seven, one of them a stewardess. trainee. India's
national news agency Samacber earlier repcrted there were 83
perSOOB aboard. A !!pokesman for the domestic airlines said
the hijacker appeared to be acting alone, but he had no
Information &lt;11, tbe motive, possible demands or a weapons,
· saying officials were unable to place a caU to Lahore to speak
to the captain of the plane. .

HONG KONG- CHINA BEGAN A PERIOD of mourning
today for Mao Tse-tung, the farmer's son who became one of
the world'~ greatest revolutionaries and founder of what he
called the "New China" 27 years ago. Mao, who died early
Thursday at the age of 82, was the last - and most revered of · the - "big three" leaders of the Chinese Communist
revolution to die this year,
The ~ath of Mao, the supreme ruler of one quarter of
mankind, was almost certain to deepen a divisive power
struggle that he launch.ed early this year after Premier Chou
En-lai died of cancer. Marshal Chu Teh, the other 'member of
Racine unit on
the "big three" leaders who led the epic Long March of
Communist guerrillas and eventually defeated the Nationalist
two E·R runs
Chinese forces, died July 6. .
Government and party leaders called for unity and
RACINE- The Racine ER immediately declared they will continue the policies Mao laid
squad at I p.m. Thursday pown in domestic and foreign af(airs.
transported Mrs. Harry
Allison from her home here to
CAVENDISH, VT.- A FRIEND OF EXILED Russian
Holzer Medical Center.
author Alexander Solzhenitsyn has denied knowledge the
At 6:45p.m. the squad was Nobel Prize-winner Intends to move here, despite contrary
called to the Creed ·James statements from the U. S.lmmigration Service in Washington.
residence, RD, PorUand. Mr.
Alexander Vlnogradov confirmed Thursday Solzhenitsyn
James SW!talned a burn when had visited him here last spring, but said he had not spoken
he fell against a healer in his with him Since. He said reports he had purchased land and a
bathroom. He was taken to home for the author here were false. RU~Uors Solzhenltsyn was
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·moving to this small southeastern community were sparked
when the U.S. Immigration Service said earlier In the day the
author said he planned to settle here.
Grace M. Smith

jets' crash
BELGRADE:, Yugoslavia
UPI - A British and a
Yugoslav airliner carrying a
toial of 169 persons collided in
lhe air today northeast of the
. Yugoslav city of Zagreb and
both planes crashed Into
cornfields.
Spokesmen for Zagreb
hospitals said there were no
survivors.
The British Airways
Trident jetliner with 63
persons aboard and a
Yugoslav DC9 airliner of the
Inex·Adria line with 106
persons collided late this
morning above the village of
Vrbavec, about 20 miles
northeast of Zagreb, the
capital of the Yugoslav
repubUc of Croatia.
The British plane, flight

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Suaday through
Tuesday, cloudy Sunday, a
ehaaeeofsbowenMouday
and clearing Tueoday.
Highs 1"111 be In lbe 70s and
lows will be In the 50s.

died Wednesday

HARTFORD, W. Va. GrKe M. Smith, 86, Hartford,
died Wednesday In Holzer
Veterana Memorial Hospital Medical Center.
ADMISSIONS - William
Born Sept. 24, 1889, in Hart•
Hunt Jr., Albany; Gloria ford, daughter of the late
Decker, Reedsville; Barbara Thomas Holt and Hannah
Jewett, Middleport: Charles May Archer Holt, she was a
Cooper, Guysville; Ruby retired telephone operator.
Smith, Middleport: Julia She was also preceded in
Roush, Syracuse; Emory death by her husband, Harry
James, Portland; Clara Smith. ..
Pullins, Pomeroy. ·
Surviving are two sons,
. DISCHARGES - Mary Vinton Smith, Hartford, and
Pickens,
Clara Rmey,
WOOdrow Hall, ·Paul Smith, Lester Smith, Zanesville,
Teddy Keene, Rebecca Hess, Ohio, and two sisters, Mrs.
Qavid Pierce, Ronald Dailey. Florence Priddy, Jackson,
and Mrs. Mary Roush, New
Hsven.
Funeral~~ervices will be at
BRANCHES TO CLOSE
lhe Foglesong Funeral Home
The RuUand branch and on Saturday at I p.m., with
the Tupper• Plains branch of Rev. o. B. Hat~her of.
the Pomeroy NaUonal Bank flciatlng. Burial will follow In
will Close at noon Saturday so the Graham Cemetery.
employees may atiend the Calling hours will be z to 4
funeral services of Mrs. p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
Bertha Hobstetter. · ·
funeral home today.

0.

In Dacron .cotton ·Blends,
Vinyls, leathers,
Wool and others.

Virginia and West Virginia.
Samples of fish are to be
collected at II lock and dam
si!es along the entire length
of the main stem of the Ohio
River. The samples will then
be studied in Jaboratories of
the Food and Drug
Administration, the
Smithsonian Institution and
the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
Scientists will be trying to
determine
levels
of
pesticides, PCB 's
(polychlorinated bi-phenyls)
and metals, such as mercury,
In the Oesh of the fish. The
analyses also will detect any
Incidence of tumors in the
fish.

~·:•::::=~:•'•:•:•:•'•'•"•':Y•'•:•:••o;o;•:•:····,•,·,·,•,•o;o;o;•;o·o;•;•;•;•;•;•;::•o•·o·•;::••••::::::'•»'•'..:•'•}'•' •,•,y~/)$

EXCELLENT SELECTION

SHOE BOX

•

enttne

'.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
four-week fish sampling
project begins Monday to
help scienUsts detennine the
amount of pollution In the
Ohio River.
"The proJect will Indicate
the overaU state of the 'ecosystem' because fish
generally reflect river
quality conditions," said
~lclals of the Ohio River
Valley Water Sanitation
Commission (ORBAN CO),
which will make the · fish
sample In cooperation with
state and federal agencies.
ORSANCO is an interstate
agency representing IUinoi.s,
Indiana, Kentucky, Ne.w
York, Ohio, Pennsylvania •.

1

o.

•

•

..:...•

Kay's Beauty Salon

'

•

needed. Four buses have been running during the Jtrlke and
Morris Indicated that !!el.'llrlng a fifth llUI wW be no problem.
Meantime, ·teachers of the d.iatrlct today continued
malntainiAA pickets at the various schools d the diatrlct and
by the wne token, schools were "offlclaUy open" llltbofllh
a1tendance to classes during the four day strike ha3 been
praetically zero.
_
It was em[ilasiZed today that the expense of transpu'llng
the band and football team to Point Pleasant thl.s evenlnc Ia
being paid for by the respective booster grou)lll.

Fish samplings
will test river

Open On Mooday ·

•

e

·• Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Septembe~ 10, 1976

participate with as!istant Principal Fenton Taylor as coach
since he is an administrator, not a teKher Involved In the
strike. The band will also make the trip to the game and John
Mora, junior high principal, and Earl Young, an assistant high
school principal, will acc(lllpany the group Since they, too, are'\
notinvolvedlnthestrikeslncetheyareadmlnistrators.
Nel~er the regular coaching staff nor Instrumental music
peop)e will be permitted to work with the groups. Asst. Supt.
Dan Morris was named tAl secure the buses for the team and
the band to make the trip to Point Pleasant. Five bu~ wtll be

ht

Weather

i

wiih

the board was Dennis Whalen,
Qlyahoga Falla, an attorney who has represented the board of
education on the impasse panel. Whalen said a special meeting
acbeduledfor tonight will probably not.beneeesaary. However..
upeclal session was aet for 4 p.m. &amp;mday and another special
lle!ISion at7:30 Monday. )twas Indicated, however, that the
special meeting on Monday may not be necessary. .
Before moving Into executive sesalon, the board discus3ed
the football game. scheduled with Point Pleasant tonight. lt
was Indicated that the football team will be permitted to
On hand to meet

BASED IN CLEVELAND
CLEVELAND UP!
Untied Airlines will base
almost 1,000 additional
employes in the Cleveland
area and boollt Ita local an·
nual payroll by P3 million by
1982, the company announced
Thursday.

COLUMBUS .- REP. FRED H. DEERING, ().
Monroeville, says if the full Senate retains an amendment to
his county officials pay raise bill, he will urge the Ohio HoWle
not to concur In the change. The Senate Ways and Means
Committee Thursday Unanimously recommended Deering's
· bill to the Senate; but only after a 4-3 vote adopting an
amendment removing a key section of the bill.
Removed from the House version of the bill was an
automatic cost~f~ivlng clause which would add between $750
and $1,000 a year untlll984to the salaries of aU 11 officials in
each··of Ohio's 88 counties.
· · ··
"Let's make this a pay raise bill, not an inflation-fee&lt;lliJg
bill," said Sen. Anthony J. Celetrezze Jr., 0-Cieveland,
spo11110r of the amendmen,t which passed when committee
chalnnan Sen. Marlgene Valiquette, D-Toledo, broke a 3-3
committee deadlock.

Student

PRODUCE TRUCK- TIU l..andtnark produce truck
01,1t of Marietta struck a· car driven by Rayl!lo!ld
Boatwright, killing two persons, Thursday at 8:15 a .m. on
SR 7approximately one-half mile south of Tuppers Plains.
Killed In the accident were Helen Boatwright, 46, Rt. I,
Long Bottom, and her mother, Cora Schartiger. Driver of
the car was Raymond Boatright. other passengers in the
car were Debbie Boatwright, 19, and her 10 year~ld
brother. The injured were taken to a hospital In Parkersburg by Coolville SEOE:MS. The lruck was following an
Eastern Local District school bus. The southbound bus
stopped to pick up school children and the truck, unable to
stop, went to the left around the bus and hit the vehicle
headon . The accident is still 'under Investigation.

Joint services planned
. for mot.h er, daughter

· Joint funeral services will
be held for Cora Schartiger,
84, Chester and her daughter,
Helen Boatwright, 46, 1\l. I,
Long Bottom, who were killed
in truck-&lt;:ar accident ThursCOLUMBUS-U. S. STEEL CORP. HAS SIGNED consent day morning, at 10 am.
orders with the Ohio Envlrorunental Protection Agency Saturday at Ewing Funeral
covering compliances with state air regulatiOns at two of the Home.
firms planllln nt.-theastem Ohio. Ohio E:PA Director Ned E.
The Rev. Curtiss Stephen
WUll ams and U. S. Steel General Superintendent William H. will officiate. Burial will be in
· . Continued on page 14
Chester Cemetery . Friends
1
will be received at the funeral
.................................................................... .. ...... ... ............. .... .......... .
·;:;:;:;::;:;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;r;:;:;:;r;::::t :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::r;:::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::: home at any time. .
Mrs. Schartiger was the

New football season is here
With opening of the 1976 high school football
season in southeastern Ohio tonight The ·Daily
Sentinel Is pleased to present on pages 5-6-7-8 a
four-page feature on the three Meigs County
teams and of neighboring Wahama White
Falcons at Mason,
Va.
Pictures of the Meigs teams were taken by
Katie Crow, Bob Titus and Jerry Walker.

w:

BE476, was a regular
scheduled flight en route
from London to Istanbul.
Turkey, with ii4 passengers
and a crew of nine, British
Airways in London said.
Yugoslav authorities said
most of the passengers on the
Yugoslav Adriatic port of
Split to Cologne, were Ger·
· man tourists.
A Zagreb radio reporter
said wreckage and bodies
were scattered In cornfields.
Authorities said the
collision occurred at Ji:l6
am. (4:16a.m. EST) . .
In London, British Airways
spokesman David Reed said
no passenger list was
avaUable immediately.
"I would imagine it will be
a mixed bag of nationalities,
and the ijsual group of
tourists and businessmen
combined," he said.
Yugoslavia's worst
previous air disaster occurred in May 1971 when 72
Britons and six Yugoslavs
died in the crash of a
Yugoslav chartered
Aviogenex TU134A jetliner at
Rijeka airport.
The last air crash in
Yugoslavia was in SeptRaymond Rupe, 16, Rt. I, ember, 1973. A Yugoslav
Northup, one of 14 passengers Airlines DC9 crashed at
aboard a Gallia County Local Titograd, southern
School bus was laken to the Yugoslavia, kllling . all 41
Holzer Medical Center in a persons aboard.
SEOEMS ambulance
following a school bus-car
accident at 4 p.m. Thursday Autos collide
on Saunders Hill Rd. one mUe
south of Rt. 700.
at intersection
The Galiia-Meigs P.ost
State Highway Patrol said
The Meigs County Sheriff's
lhe bus driven by Phyllis A. Department Investigated . a
Johnson, 40, Rt. I, Crown two car accident at the in·
City, and car operated by terseclion of Business Loop 7
Roger A. McGuire, 26, Rt. I, with the SR 7 bypiss In
Crown City, ·collided on a Salisbury Township at 10:15
curve . There was heavy am. Thursday .
damage to McGuire's vehicle
An auto driven by Harold
and moderate damage to the Braden, 48, CohunbWI, was
bus. McGuire was cited for turning off the bypass onto
having no operator's license . the BWiiness Loop and struck
A second mishap occurred the left side of a car operated
on Rl. 160 near the junctlon of by Dorwin D. Clark, 40;
Linsley Phillips Rd. The Galllpolis, stopped at the
patrol said an unknown intersection . Braden was
vehicle pulled from the road cited for no operator's
into the path of a vehicle license.
driven by William J. Shondel ,
32, Gallipolis . Shondel BASIE RECOVERING
swerved to avoid a collision
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
and his car slruck a ditch.
Pianist-conductor Willlim
. John P. Ash, 22, Pomeroy, "Counl'' Basie, 72, is
was cited to Municipal Court Improving at Cedars-Sinal
, for improper left turn Hospital, where he is
following a traffic accident at recovering from an apparent
2:35 p.m. on Rt. 325, four mUd stroke suffered several
tenths of a mile north of Rt. days ago.
35.
A hospital spokesman said
The palroi said Ash's car Basie was admitted to
turned then was struck in the Cedars;Sinal Wednesday in
rear by an auto operated by ·fair and stable condition but
Michael D. Musser, 21 , Rt. I, was placed In an observation
Centerville.
·
Wlil as a precaution .

TWO ASSISTED
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
two calls on Thursday, lhe
first at 12:53 p.m. for Eloise
Smith of Bradbury, who was
Ul. She was taken lo Veterans
Memorial Hos~•tal. The
second was at 8:20 p.m. for
Mamie Buchanan of 186 N.
second· Ave., also taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

da1Jihter of the late Webster
and Lovie Butler Burge. She
was born April 20, 1912.
She i_s survived by her
husband,
Clayton;
a
daughter , Mrs. Ronald Mace,
Spencer, W. Va.; six grand·
children, three haif~islers,
and five half-brothers.
Mrs. Boatwright was born
July 31, 1930. She is survived
by her father, Clayton
Schartiger ; her husband ,
Raymond; two sons, Gregory
and 'Nathan; a daughter
Deborah, and a sister, Mrs.
Ronald Mace. ·
Mrs. Boatwright was a
member of the D. of A. of
Chester. ·

Weather
Cloudy, cool tonight and
Saturday, chance of showers
tonight. Lows in the lower 50s
and highs Saturday in the
upper 60s. Probability of rain
50 per cent today, 4' -.er cent
tonight, 20 per "''' ' ._ •.rda:

hurt in
bus crash

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fridav

~ot . 10, 1976

Carter challenges Ford
oR Pentagon efficiency
.

'

By LEWIS LORD
\lalted Pnu IDteruattooal
Jimmy
Carter
and
President · ford won't
confront each other face to
face In debate for nearly two
more weeks, but a major
exchange already is under
way between . the two
candidates.
Ford, claiming Carter
goaded him Into It, accused
the Democratic nominee
Thlll1day of suggesting the
destruction of America's
defensive alliances.
Carter, campaigning in
Springfield, Dl., promptly responded that Ford's attack on
his defense poliCies "bears no
relationship to the facts."
The exchange actually
started . Wednesday when
Carter, addressing the B'nal
B'rlth
convention
.in
Washington, repeaied his caU
for defense budget cuts,
gradual overseas troop
reductions and limitationil ·on
"cynical and dangerous"
11'11111 sales that ~o to both

~

sides of the Ar-ab-Israeli
conflict.
Fvrd went hefvre the same
Jewish convention and said
that Carter, In his Wednesday
remarks, had "kicked off our
debates."
" Now, 11
said
Ford.
departilig from his prepared
text, " i''s my turn at bat."

The President accused
Carter of proposing "defense
budget cuts that would
cripple our abUity to supply
or sustain our friends, bans
oo nuclear tests by cur allies,
a nuclear strategy of massive
retaliation policies which
would invite ·a major crisis
with our aUies, including
Israel."
" If we did any of these,"
Ford said, "it would be
impossible to defend our
allies, Including Israel."
Carter replied that the
issue wasn't a strong national
defense, to which he said he
was clearly committed.
The issue is waste and
0

3:- The ~lly Sentlnel,Middleport.-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept.JO,I976

i&lt;o:·::::&lt;:·:;·«:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:;;·:·:;-:; 0&gt;:,:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·

mismanagement in the
"Mr. Carter finds it
Defense· Department and coovenient to ignore that it
throughout the federal was
a
Republican
government," Carter said. ' administration, which
"!say there is at least 5to 6 achieved
the
highest
per cent waste in the emigration rate of Soviet
Pentagon budget. Mr. Ford Jewry in history - ~old
says there is not. I say U we over what it had been under
cut the fat and frUis and get the
last
Democrat
back
to
a
defense . administration," Dole said.
establishment designed to
Sen. Walter Mondale, the
fight it will be stronger, .not Democratic vice presidential
weaker. Mr. Ford says there nominee, urged members of
is nv fat to cut.
Uie United Auto Workers in
"! am content to let the Detroit to drum up support
American peoj,le decide who lor Carter. Mondale said
is right," Carter said.
Ford believes "we can beat
Sen. Robert Dole, the inflation
by
putting
Republican vice presidential Americans out of work."
nominee, renewed the GOP
Carter's wife, Rosalynn,
attack before tile New York campaigning In Colwnbia,
convention of the Zionist S.C., said in an interview that
her SouUiem Baptist husband
Orgaf11zation of America.
Carter's criticism of the "is not an imposterh Qn
administration's alleged. religion .
failure to get more Jews out
"Jimmy's religion is very
of Russia, Dole said , is important lo him ," Mrs.
"cynical hypocrisy and Ca rter said. "He says his
represents another Carter religion is the most important
!Up-flop."
tiling in his life."

LOTTERY WINNERS
This wee~' • wlnalng Pot
0 Gold numbers were:
Five dtglt number lfli45 (slx· olll~two-fotll"
five).
'l'bree digit oumber - m
(fo... two-seveo).
· Three digit oumber - 151
(IIIJie.flve-oae).

Mao praised by Nixon
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI) - Former President
Richard M. Nixon, the Jut
known American to villi Mao
Tile-tung, in 1 rare, t11'0118gt
statement praised the
Olinese leader u a ''nlan of\
Immense physical oourage

Cv nta cted Thursday before a final ' decision was
morning, Whaley said he has made. At the present time, a
not decided whether he will substitute teacher is filling
apply lor tile position again, the position of outdoor
saying the controversy over recreation te ache r, school
his hiring "has been a night- officials said.
The AEA had claimed that
mare" and "tough on me and
my family." He also said the the board violated its
students may have been most agreement wi th tile teachers
association because the
hurt by the controversy.
The school board scheduled position Of outdoor recreation
a special meeting · Friday teacher was not advertised
morning ·to discuss
the witllin the school system and
did not aUow other teachers
decision.
Whaley was hired by the in the system to apply lor the
school board In June to fill the position.
B.oth the Ohio Revised Code
position of head basltetbaU
coach and outdoor recreaijon and the Athens City School
instructor, but the AEI\ Professional Policies
challenged the hiring, Agreement provide teachers
claiming the school board witllin the school system
violated both a master should be given first con,
agreement with the teachers sideraijon. lor any vacancies
and the state's "Sunshine that occur and that all
Law."
teachers are employed first
In July, Judge Howard as teachers with supissued
a
temporary plemental co ntracts
restraining order, halting the receiving secondary conhiring of Whaley so additional sideration and these are to be
evidence could be presented aUotted according to the area

Glenn, Carter together
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- U.S.
9111. Jabn Glem, ~.and
[IN••!f.l'lllc pnllldentlal nomlaee Jimmy Carter are on
tbe beat cf terms, despite
Cartlr's ~election of Walter
Mondlle owr Glenn aa his
vice presidential

mmingmate.

DIDII!a beetle l)lorlllng of

cautpligJing for Carter on a

downtown COlumbus city
block uti at a suburban hwle
'I'IQnday, c.rter and Glenn
wwe DeVIll' lliCII'e than an
~m~'slenitb

apart.

When uked If he bad asked
carter why he was not
dialeD; Glemt said "No, he
cldn1 tell me and I didn't ask.
It wu one cf tbe toughest
' declllona he ever made and It
wu his- and his alone."
Cartlr waa Glenn's bouse

guest Wednesday night.
"Mter we got to our home
fr&lt;m the airport, we stayed
up for about an boll' and a
half discussing campaign
matters and his endorsement
of the bill I am cosponsoring," said Glenn.
Later Thursday, at an
airport news conference P'ior
to Carter's departure for
more campaigning in Dlinois,
Carter pubiicaUy enlorsed a
bill Glenn bas co-sponsored.
'nle legislatioo, which is
scheduled for Senate floor
debate later this month,
would require most all
federal
agencies
to
periodically justify their
existence or be eliminated.
"We are very glad to bave
his endorsement," said Glenn
"It will do us a IU good." .

Glenn said he woula campaign for Carter as much as
he could after Congress
adjourns In early October.
Glenn predicted Carter
would win Ohio Nov. 2, but
said "It won't be a sho&lt;Hn."
Glenn also praised the
organization Carter's Ohio
campaign manager, Daniel
Horgan, has formed.
Horgan, a native of New
Jersey, was named last
month to replace Ted Celeste.
"Dan Horgan is doing a
great job. I thought his being
from out.of..tate mlght be a
problem, but that's not true,"
said Glenn.
Glenn said that with
Horgan running Car!f!r's
campaign for Ohio's 25
Electoral College votes,
inter-party squabbles would
be avoided.

DR. LAMB

Surviving ~uses would
WASIDNGTON (UP! ) get
an additional eumptloo
Mter almost three years of
of
either
$250,000 or bne-balf
effort, congressional ta'i:
the
gross
estate.
writers have produced the
Elslate
tal:
relief would be
final version of a major tax
revision bill Uiat wiD touch phaaect In ov~ a five-year
ev ·e ry . American's period, after which the
estlglated 121,000 estates now
pocketbook.
. A conference cmunlttee subject to the tu: would be
completed the · task of pared down to 50,000 - an
reconciling the differences
between House .
Senate
versions of the massive bill
Thursday night after a flurry
of last-minute decisions,
including a surprise decisioo
to include significant estate
tax revisions.
The legislation, the first
major tax bill since 1969,
ctl!tinues the CUITI!Ilt $17.3
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - State
billion in tax cuts throug~
1977, while hundreds of pages Auditor Th&lt;mas Ferguson
of "reform" provlsioos will said today he has proposed
raise a net $1.6 bWlon In new legislatioo which would allow
pooling of the cash balances
federal tax revenue.
of
nine separate state funds to
In 1978 and later )'ears, as
help
tile state "temporarily
estate tax changes come into
.
reilolve
its seriot11 casb flow
play, the federal revenliO!
problems."
gain will drop to about $985 .
Under ferguson's proposal
million a year.
the
total · operating fund
Dozens of Special interests,
would
consist of money in the
ranging from railroads Ill
working parents, will benefit General R.evenue,
Rotary,
from tile bill while dozens IX Departmental
of competence of the teachers
Federal
RevenliO!
Sharing,
others .w ill . lose, such as
desiring the extra . assign· wealthy .professionals who WUdlife, Waterway safety,
ments.
have used tax shelters to Highway Safety, Highway
Howard ruled that the avoid taxation on their excess Operating, Liquor Control'
school board breached its inc ~me.
Rctary and State Lottery
agreement
with
the
President Ford is expected Funds.
association when it voted to to sign it despite bitter
Ferguson said certain
hire Whaley by not ad- opposition to one provision crlt.lcal state obligations
. vertising the pos1 lion wiUtin denying certain foreign tax could be paid from 1hese
the school system and not breaks to COOlpallies that funds 1 such as Aid to
offering already employed cooperate in international Dependent Children, and
teachers the opportunity to boycotts such as the Arab health care .payments, wben
apply for the position.
boycott of Israel. The necessary. Use of the
"It is understandable tha t administration complained mechanism would be on an
filling the position of head Ibis would bainper their emergency basis only,
basketball coach would be of Middle East peace efforts. Ferguson emphasized.
great interest to the defend"The concept Is not
Olanges in estate tax had
ant board and the community been demanded by farmers original," said ·Ferguson,
at large, but the defendant and othel's who said heirs pointing out that 10 nearby
must not let this interfere were being !creed to seU states have 90111e form of
with their commitment by family property to pay the cash consolidation or
policy anc! agreement to its tax.
operating lund ''from whicb
primary concern with em·
The major estate tax to pay their bills."
Ferg111011 said the total
ploying teachers" Howard change is to greatly increase
said in his decision.
operating
lund concept would
the current ~.ooo exemption
The AEA also challenged - the amount of estate on be enacted into law during
the hiring of Whaley by the which no tal: must be paid. the upcilming legislative
school board on the grounds This would be changed to a ·session as a temporary
that the board did not adhere tax credit that would be the measure to expire June 30,
to the state's Sunshine Law, equivalent cf $~,666ln 1977, 1977.
" It would ease a recwTeot
requiring open meetings.
gradually increasing over
Howard rUled however that five years to a permanent cash imbalance In the slate's
the school board, . "at least $175,625 in 1981 and later General Fund while aUowlrtg
the legislature time to
minimally complied with years.
methodically consider a
Ohio's Sunshine Law."
pennanent correction of the
He ruled tha~ the comslate's cash flow for the fl.scal
plianCe witil the Sunshine . GODWIN PICKED
WASHINGTON (UPI)
biemlum beginning July 1,
Law "does not overcome
GOv.
Mills
E.
Godwin
has
1'Tn," said Fergu&amp;OII.
what the court has found to be
been
named
honorary
"It seems to me to be
a faUure of the defendant
(school board) to comply chairman of the · Virginia rldiculotll for tbe state of
with its statutory and con- President Ford Qmmittee OhJo to say to Its c-edltors
tractual ~uties with respect and Ford campaign officiaLs 'we can't pay you' when we
to the procedure It foUowed say tiley e:r;pect him to be a have cash totaling upwards of
a billion dollars on band at
leading up to the adoption of big help in the Soulll.
are
fortunate
indeed
"We
any me time In the various
its resolution of June 21, 1976,
tbat
Governor
Godwin
is
accounts,"
said Ferguson.
employing Whaley."
joining
President
Ford's
"It's
a1ao
very
coatly of
The AEA had also
campaign,"
James
A.
Baker
scbool districts who could be
challenged the school board's
hiring of Whaley on tbe said Thursday as he forced to borrow on
grounds that he had not yet announced the appointment. anticipated local tal: receipts
obtained certificaijon from " We expect him to be ·because the state camot
inflliO!ntial in otr effort to make
Its
regular
the state.
carry
other
SouUiern
states
distributions
because
of lack
Altilough Howard ruled In
as
weU
as
Virginia."
of
money
in
the
General
favor of the board on the
Fund.
certification issue, he said the
" What I propose, in
action by the board, "may be ISRAEU GUESTS
BEVERLY Hlllll, Calif. essence, Is that the state put
a dubious education policy to
employ teachers who are not (UP!) - Simcba Dlnitz, Isra- all the money from the nine
certified at the time of their el's ambassador to the United fundi Into me pot and pay Its
make
Its
States, and Teddy Kollek, b11ls, . or
employment."
mayor of Jerusalem, will be distributions, from thll pot,
principal speakers at the oo an emergency baala ooly," .
three-&lt;Jay International FaU said Ferguson. "Book
l.eadenhip Conference of balances would still allow
what money Is In what
State of I!l'ael Bonds.
account
at any one time and
They will bolll addreBS
dinner meetings at the all acoounts would balance
conference, which began oot at the end of the fl.scal
year.H
Thlll1day night.

am

Problem of
cash flow

solvable

A look at flu 50 years ago
and grandma , who had
':tA~;o:~E.
Lamb, M.D.
DR. LAMB ...: caught the flu from me. Pa
I
There's so much talk about was afraid because grandthe Ou. I am over 70 and had father couldn't even make a
It real bad when It was here cup of tea. Being from the old
before. Igotltbelng in the big country he sure cured both of
pande, November 11, when us, Grandma In three days
Warld Wll' I ended. I was and weeks later for me.
Here's the cure. Laugh If
llvq with my grandparents.
They aaid It was a punish· you like but it did the trick.
ment for aU of us. We should He put camphorated oil In
haft been on our knees, not goose grease, heated It and
out enJoyinl! ountelves when rubbed our chest. Then he
other people had such mlxed up mustard and put
the oil and goose grease In it
bMrtec:he.
Wtll I IUN did have a bad between two sheets of red
Ume of ft. No doctor came to · flame!. My chest was red for
. _ , Ibpltall wouldn't awhile; it sure was hot .
late aiiy more patients. Here's what he gave us for
Rella,. and frlenda didn't medicine, He took heavy old·
go IIIII' each other. We didn't fashioned molasses and put
haft paiD pllla In lboae days. . the rum in it. He put some in a
Itwueutor oil, haklnlaoda, cup of hot water and It reaUy
electric oil, cunpborated oil, made me sweat.
Today all these old·
· even coal oil.
I am lllld I wu out of my fashioned remedies are
lllld. Ole cf my unclea left 1 laughtd a~ but lt worked. I'm
bcJIIt If dirt rum, heavy still around .. My grand·
ldlld, on lba lfep. My fll'and• parents died when they were
fatber bad to look after me over 70. The oil! boy knew his

.,

.

~

onions, even though he
couldn't boil water. What I'd
·like to know is what was the
dark molasses and dark
heavy rum? Was it a case of
get better or die? It sure was
hard to take alter you got on
the mend.
DEAR READER. - Thanks
for giving us a colorful picture of the flu more than SO
years ago. From the volume
of letlers I have received
from people who lived
through the first worldwide
flu epidemic it seems the
treatment you described was
pretty standard, with emphasis on rum and whiskey.
Alcohol is still used in the
treatment of colds and flu by
many people . as a home
remedy. It may be a sedative
and help people to feel better
in that sense . but It does
nothing to combat the virus
infection causing the Illness.
The only way to treat the
flu properly Is to prevent It
and we can do this today even

Olineae-Amll'ican !rlllndlhlp
bad beCOme lndilpenllble tD

the lnteresta of bolh our
Pallonl,"
NI.Jton aald
Thuntlay.
The fCl'tlMI' chief aecutlft,
IS, flrlll met wilb Mao In an
maprecede~Md Illite v1a1t u
Prtlldlla. 1111 IICODd vialt
,waa IMl February U I
private cllllell lllll'ly two

·
.
k
h
d
E·very poeketboo touc e r,::~·f~r ~ ;:~~

Whaley hiring did not cJmply
with law according tojudge
Athens high school will
apparently have to find
another basketball coach
lollO'Irinl! a judge's decision
earlier this week.
Accardlng to a story In
Thursday 's A then s
M~er·, COmmon Pleas
Judie Lowell Howard ruled
that the Athena aty School
llolrd's hiring of Bill Whaley
·u ould901' recreation teacher
and bead bukelbaU coach is
nuD and void because the
achool board did not comply
willl alate law or adhere to
the tenna of an agreement
with the Athens Educalion
AlloclaUon (AEA).
Howard's ruling ordered
that the school board should
perfocm Its dulies according
to tbe qreement with the
AEA and means the sc!Jool
biMnl wUI probably have to
go through the hiring
)II'OCedure again to fill the
pcllitlan cf head basltetbaU
coacb and outdoor recrealion
leec:ller·

and
Ideological
detl!mllnation" and quoted a
poem by Mao.
" As
leadera
who
1ep; ented totally dlffaenl
Jjtllot!ophlee and vieWS, we
both recot~nlred when we met
In Peking In 1972 that

Uiough that was impossible
with . the epidemic you survived. That Is why vac·
cinations are so important.
Some of the other
By ROBERT KAYLOR
medicines may help shrink
CfflCAGO (UPI) - Jimmy
the nasal lining and make
breathing easier. Supportive
ca re in terms of adequa~
ftfJ DAII. \' SIHflHIL
'
DfVOfiO TO THf '
flui\Ls and nourishment is the
IHrtaiiTOI
best that can be offered. The
MIHIS.MASONA. ...A
(HdrJa L. JANfdHIU
rest of the treatment is for
complications. Bacterial
lltOIIfrf HOI'UCH
(ltf' ...,..,.
complications, such as some
='ulllilhH ••~ ••e&gt;ert S.tur•r ~
pneumonias, can be treated TIM Ohio 'f'••r Mlllhlflt ~y.
and that will help a lot if there 111 C.WI It,, , _ , . , , 0Wo .., ..,
lutln"• Office lth~• "1-UM,
is a worldwide epidemic.
,._,."'·'"'·
s..n4 ,.... !Mit.fe ,... ..
For more information ltllfOf'a.l
--about flu and related cold-like ..._...• .,. Ohkt.
,
:~
Illness readers can send SO W•tl · OrlfHth ~y, tnc., lei•1111111 ._,....,.... •••-· rn n.1rt
cents for The Healtil Letter ti,..IH
.. ...wTorii,N ,, , 1MU,
i
number 3-2, ,Colds and Flu Awe
s...-..e,,~ ,..,": o.u~ ..,.
.....,_ ..-a.w. 71 - t t ,_
Group, Prevention and
WH61. ly Mot« lou•• wt.r. ..,..._
Treatment. Send a long, ..
,.,k• not ••UaW., OM -•h.
stamped, self-addressed u.,. .•.,. ..... lfl Oh l ~ of141 w..... ~
l'-, IJI.Mt II• Mon•h.. •11.111fhtejt
envelope for malllng. Ad· ,_,.._,
17 ••• ltMwhotre IBM , . . ,
dress your letter to Dr. Lamb
\i• Me•UM IIJ.JI; Ttw. ........., tJ.Jt,
In aore of Ulis newspaper, ,.,.."',..,,.,..,.,..ea ._....._ .......,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019. · ' - - - - - - - - - 1

estimated 2 per cent of aU
estates. Curbs allo were Pill
on "generatlon..,klpplng
trusts" · ·- used' by the
wealtby to avoid Inheritance
tu:esfor nlong asa ceniii!'Y.
The bill alao:
- Places curbs on tu:
shelters In real estate,
farming 111d other lnduslrles.
- Slrelgthens and e:rp~~~ds
tbe minimum tu on the
wealthy who use tax.free
preference lncune to JIIY
lltlle or no n!gular tu.
- Uberalllee credits and
deductlons taken by manY
citizens, for Instance
:Stu:~~-: th=
, . mJr.e "-"•ctl
wbo don t 1te
,-- 0111.
- Tightens otber tax
break&amp;, such u the sick PlY
ezcluslon and business
deductions lor rental
vacation h&lt;mes.
- Reviles the capital gains
tax to discourage speculatioo
through a 12-month_holding
period, while allowing up to
$3,000 a year In ordinary
inc&lt;me to be offset by capital

losses.
- GIVe. taxpayers new
rights In dealing with the
Internal RevenliO! ~ce,
1x1t takes away rights such as ··
allowing Social Security
numbers to be used for
welfare purposes such as
tracking down runaway
fathers.

~!

partleulai'ly IJn..
prelled by hll . profound
undentandlnl oot oo1,y of the
'•
fl'Obl,eDll of his own ......,_,
but of the objective reaUtlel
of the world lltuatlon.
· "I am confident lbat
whoever succeetis Oia1rman
Mao wUJ eootlnue to work
toward tbe goal cf imJro'llnl
relations bet'lf1len the
·
bU f Cliina
People's Repu c 0
.
and the United Statee ci
America and belplng to
rebuild .....cture of
a """
peace
~~-~. Pacific and for tbe
Nlmn deacrlbed Mao u "a
!Dtally dedicated and
prlllffilltiC Communist ... I
unique man In 1 generation ci
great revolutlooary leaders"
and lauded ~lm as "a
visionary poet, deep!;
steeped In the hlstcry of.the
Chinese people."
Nlmn quoted a poem he
said Mao wrote several years
ago:
"'We had much to do
quick

'

..... ....
!.,.,
...e ""'-ea
•..., spina
'And time IS short
'And so a morning and an
evening count"'
"There can be no doubt tbat
he macl!l h!i morning and bJa
evening 'count 1n workln8 for
the vision he saw and for the
principles In which he so
strongly believed," Nlilon
said.

Democrats win
budget battle
WASHINGTON (UPI) Democrats In Congress WOO
tbe great debate over the
budget hands down. In fact,
when It came to the final
moment, lllere was almost oo
debate.
•
The House, by a vote of 'JZ1
to 151 ThUI'Iday, approved
$413.2 ~n in spending by
tbe federal government lor
tbe IIBcal year beginning Oct.
1. The Senate, by a vote of :;5
to 23, approved $412.8 bWlon.
A House-Senate conference
ammittee planned to Iron
out
relatively
minor
differences between the two
JX'oposed budgets and send
the Dna! version back tD both
houses for final passage next
week.
Both Ule House and Senate
versim caU lor abou\ $19
billion more In spending than
President ford propelled in
January and some $14 blllloo
more than Ford's budget
revlaed at mldyear, which
reflected some congressional
decl.alons Ford bad opposed.
The House and Senate ver-

sions include virtuaUy all the
money Ford requested for
delen~e, more than he asked
for jo])s and other domestic
programs, and tbey reject $10
bilJion ·In new tax culll he

SUSAN MOVES
WASHINGTON (UP!) SUaan Ford has moved out of
the While Htiuse and Is living
with tbree junior college
cleeanata in a townhouae
8CI'OB8 the Potomac River in
suburban Aleundrla, Va.
!lleUa Rabb Weldenfeld,
Betty Ford's preu lleCretary,
said
Thursday
Ule
President'&amp; 19-year~ld
daughter made the move with
the a)JIII'Oval of her parents
and wlll remain In the
townhouse untll she starts
cia es in January at the
University of Kansas.

DOLE TO SPEAK
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Republican vice presldantlal
nominee Robert J. Dole wUI
be principal speaker Sept 21
at the 1976 OhJo ReptibUcan
C«tvenlion.
Republican Stat~ .
O!alnnan Kent B. McGough
said Tlllnday wer 2,000 ·
delegates, alternates and
guests from aCI'OStl the stale
will attend ·the c111ventkll.
Other speakers will Include
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohlo,
Gov. James A. Rbcdee and
slate Senate Minority Leader
Michael J. Maloney.

proposed.
All year loog, Ford lind bla .

aides had told C«tgreu the
budget It was fashioning
would run the risk of re-.
igniting Inflation, slowing
economic recovery and
worsening unemployment.
Demticrata in Congress
contended their budget would
a-eate · a miUion more lobe
than Ford's withOOJt risk of
new Inflation and would be a
step toward a balanced
"full
budget
and
employment" (usually
defined u 4 per cent unemployment) by 1~.
When the Issue reached the
Senate
Thursday
n.o
Republican rose to alate
ford's oppos!Uoo, althougll
some
speeches
were
prepared for later ln8ertlon in
the C«tgresslonsl Record.

.........

........ ..........,.. ,.,........

~rriltr

s...........

v

ally.
It was a ll'adltlooal gesture

Harry Trtman win bla upaet

election in 1948. But the
traditional torchlight
blelllng wu withheld from
• George McGovern In 1m.
"Chicago was abaolutely
u n b e II e v a b I e , ' • 1 n
e:rhuberant Carter told
welcomers on his arrival In
MUwaukee later Thureday
night. ''Tbere were h~
cf thouaands of people In the
streelll ... there waa 1 llleldy .
roar of ~ 1r11m the
beginning cf tile ]lll'llde all
the way to the end. It never
stopped."

Today,Carterwutowlnd
up tbe llrat week of hll fall
campaign with a atop In a
5eriUn dlltrlet cf MUwaukee
and than fly 011 tD Florida tD

which bosee,t of the Cook
County Democratic Cl'ganlza·
tlon have bestowed upon
pruldentlal candlclatee they add!• lbe Internalillllal AJ.
haveaupported.li led to Jot.n aoclaliOIIcfMachlnllllaunkll.
F. Kennedy's crucla1 victory The llhnk and labor m Is I .
In the state In 1960 and helped Jll\ta'n he hal been foUowtnc

..

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICIIMAN
UP! Sporll FAller

NEW YORK (UPI) - Ballplayers love to nit-pick. II they
can't find anyooe better, freli,uenUy they'll nit-pick one another
and that's what Jay Johnstone and Gary Maddox were doing
now.
They were on the subject of playing Ute outfield. Whenever
he wants any of his outfielders to move, Danny Ozark usually
moves !hem himself. Sometlmes, though, Gary Maddox shifts
them from center field and that was what he and Johnstone,
who platoons with Ollie Brown In right, were nitpicking about
In the Phlllles' dubhouse.
"You move me one way, Ozark moves rne another,"
Johnstone complained.
Maddox, playing solitaire, never bothered taking his eyes off
the cards.
"You don't move anyway," he answered, dryly. "Anytlme
somebody tells you sometillng, you just go b4!ck to your same
old spot."
·
What was this, dlasenslolt among the Phlllles? Was this a
sign they were gettlng on each other's nerves over a tailspin
which threatens to blow thetr mlntis as well as any chance they
ever had of winning ihe division title In the National League
East alter.having led It by 15'h games less than three weeks
ago?
It wasn't anything like that at all.
.
The back-and.forth between Jay JohnSton and Gary Maddox
wu merely some of the usual shop talk you hear in any big
league clubhouse, the kind of talk that easily could be mlataken
for quarrelsome dissent or lingering resentment when actually
It's nothing more than a couple of ballplayers with tile same
team givrng each other the same little needle they ·do every
day and night of the season.
You can tell there 's trouble when players on Ute same team
suddenly STOP talking to each other; there's never too much
of a problem though as long as everybody is talking to each
other, and til at's the case now with the Phillies.
There's no dissension, ito panic among them. They realize
they're backsliding and they have a chance to blow the whole
box of biscuits. They'd have to be deal, dumb 'and btind not to
know that, because they hear and see suggestions of it
everywhere they go. Everybody keeps reminding them of 1964
when the PhiWes blew a 61'.-game lead with only 12 to go, and
the present Phils keep reminding everybody those were 25
different guys.
Yes, Danny Ozark is concerned, but when a team goes into
the ~Ind. of slump the ·Phillies hav~, how much can any
manager possibly do' Not much.
'"I've talked with my players," Ozark told me. "They've
made some mental mlstslt:es In tlie past two weeks, which is a
little hard to understand beeause they didn 't make hardly any
tile whole season long, but when a player makes a mistake he
feels worse ~bout it than you do. You don 't make him feel
better by chewing him out. What I usually do is talk to him
about it the next day, alter he has bad a chance to think about
. it. Why put more pressure on a player when he's already
tense? It only makes him tenser."
None of the PhiUies have spent their World Series' shares yet
and few,are even thinking as far ahead as the Reds and the
playoffs. Theullmmediate concern right now js beating the
Cubs. The Phils aren't as down as you mlght think. They're
, aware most of Uieir lead is gone, but they don't act as if they
tilink the Pirat,es already have tilem beat.
· "!don 't feel anybody's goon~ beat ine," says second baseman Dave Cash, not in any bragging sense at aU.
"We have to hang in there and grind it out," he says. "We've
. come too far to give up' now. ! rem!!ffiber w~en I was with the
Pirates we had a rough speU like we're ha vlng here now. The
Cardinals and Mets were behind us and we lost 13 out of 15. In
~ aU that time, tilough, we,lost only a half game in the standings
, because every time we'd lose, they'd lose."
: It has been different tbis time.
The Phlllies can't expect anybody to help them. They're
• going to have to win it all by themselves or else be remem·
bered forevermore as the team that blew one of tile biggest
~ leads In baseball history.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sportl Wrller
Jim Lonborg said it ''might
have been a little too much"
and Manager Danny &lt;nark
said It "gave everybody a
twinlde down the spine."
They had lost three streight
games and .11 of their last 12,
cutting their 15\'.!.game lead
· to 41'.! and returned home to
face
fans
generally
considered among tile most

ftckle in sports. .
Pirates to five games In the
Bul as Ule PhiWes ran onto National League's Eastern
the field to face the Chicago Division.
Cubs Thursday night, the
''That had to he stimulating
crowd of 2'1 ,194 rose and gave to everyone on the club,"
them a 9tkecond ovation, cmunented &lt;nark. "It gave
which amounted to a everybody at winkle down the
tremendous
vote · of spine."
confidence.
"It mlght have been a little
. The Ph!Uies lived up to that too much for us to cootend
"vote" as they defeated the with," said Lonbotg, who
Cubs, 4-2, and increased their pitched a seven-hitter and
lead over the idle Pittsburgh raised hi.s record to 15-9. "It's

Miami faces Marshall
United PreniDteroatloaal

game against Syracuse
wiUiout fullback Dan Seleet,
'Although saddled with ita the Falcons' leading 1975
first opening game loss since rusher.
1967, Miami and coach Dick · 8aleet spralped a knee in
Crum aren't ready throw in practice last week and
doctors ruled him out of the
tile towel.
The Redsklns, pre«ason Syracuse game, and possibly
pick to win their fourth next week too.
straight Mid-American
In the cinly other meeting
Conference football title, between the two, ihe Falcoos
were beaten 14-10 last burled the· Orangemen 41·14
Saturday by North Carolina In 1973, but coach Don Nehlen
on a controverSial ttlck play. warns things will be much
"We played well enough to different this time around.
have won," said Crwn, and
"Thi.s will be a very big
then warned, "but ooe game game fQr Syracuse,'' said
doesn't make a season. We Nehlen. " It wasn't that way
just have to pick up and go back In 1973 when we played
from there."
·
tbem. This coUld be the beSt
Miami faces MarshaU at Syracuse team in about the
Huntlngton, W.Va., Saturday last 10 years. It should be a
and the Thundering Herd of super game."
coach Frank Ellwood could
Although the Falcons will
have picked a better Ume to be missing Saleet- who will
get in the way of the be replaced by sophomore
Redsklns.
Steve Holovacs-Nehlen has
Marshall, beaten 31-14 in its a healthy Dave Preston for
opener by Morehead (Ky.) tbe first time in over a year.
State, has dropped 13 straight
Preston, a 5-11, 200pound
games to Miami, the last two senior, was the nation's fifth
by 42-0 and 00.0 scores, and It · leading rusher as a
could be worse this year.
sophomore with 1,414 yards,
Other games this week m but was injured off and oo
tile yet abbreviated Ohio most of 1975.
college schedule · finds . Toledo, playing witbout aUBowling Green at Syracuse, America quarterback Gene
Kent State at Central Swick for the first time In
Toledo
at three years, faces a
Michigan,
Massachusetts, Central State Massachusetts team which
at Morris Brown (Ga.), was 8-2 last year.
Ashland at Franklin (Ind. ),
Jeff Hepinstail, heirDefiance at Albion (Mich.)
and Michigan State at Ohio
.State in d/lylight cootests.
Night games include
CinCinnati at Tulane,
Youngstown State at Dayton,
Temple at Akron and Adrian
Malor League Standings
(Mich.) at Blulf!Dn. ·
.
By United Pnss International
Sophomore quarterback
National League
Larry F6rtner was one• of
East
L. · Pet. GB
Miami's bright spots last Philadelphia W.·
85 53 .616
week against the Tar Heels. Pittsburgh
80 58 .580 5
72 66 ' .522 13
Fortner completed 12 of 23 New York
Chicago
63
77 .450 23
passes for 224 yards and Sf. Louis
61 75 . 449 23
47 89 .346 37
nearly pulled the game out ~ t real
West
lor the Redskins in the
W.. L.· Pet. GB
closing minutes.
Cincinnati
90 51 , .638
Bowling Green, expected to ~~~~~e.les ;~ ~- j~ ~~
be Miami's top challenger for San Diego
66 71 ..462 25
the MAC title, goes Into its San Francisco 64 78 .451 26112

Bench paces win
EASY

to INSTAll

4" SEWER &amp;
DRAIN PIPE
JUST

27e
PER FT.

•
;

AVAILABLE IN
250 FOOT ROU.S

'

BAUM'S TRUE

VALUE STORE
985-3301
CHESTER, 0.

HOUSTON (UPI) - That
rumbling you hear on the
Oncinnati Reds may just be
the awakening of Johnny
Bench's bat.
Bench, who has been both·
ered by an injury to his right
shoulder most ol the season,
cracked out three hits and
drove In a run In the Reds' 4-3
win over Houston.
The victory, coupled with
Los Angeles' 4-3 loss to San
Francisco, gave the 'Reds a 10
game lead In the National
League West In their drive lor
a second consecutive pennant
and World Series cham·
plonshlp.
.' The Reds won the game
In the 11th inning on an error
by Houston rookie second
baseman Alex Taveru.
Joe . Morgan 's two-run
single in the ninth inning tied
tile score at 3-3, and he scored
the winning run In the lith.
With one out, Ken Griffey hit

an easy roller to Taveras, but
the rookie threw the ball to
the dugout for a two-base
error. It was Taveras's first
majoc league game .
Morgan was walked
Intentionally and while
Griffey tried to steal 2nd,
Morgan moved to third and
scored on pinch-hitter Bob
Bailey's sirigle.
Rawly Eastwick, 11-5, got
the win and Will McEnaney
picked up his seventh save.
American League
ooo'oo1 000-- t

~hie ago

no
Oakland
on 000 oox- 2 8 0
eret
(9·9)
end
Esslan,
Downing 161 ; Norris. Todd (21 ,
Lindblad 161, . Fingers 181 and
Tenacec WP- Todd (1 .SI . HRChlcago. Orla ltJ) .
Detroit
000 000 000-- o 2 o
Bo&gt;ton
on 200 10x- 5 11 o
Rut)le , Crawford (4) , Grilli
(8 ) and Freehan ; Wise {\2.10}

(10 Innings)

California 001 020 020 1&gt;- 5 12 2
Kanm Cly 000 210 002 t- 6 18 0
Hamel I, Overy (9J. Scott llOl
WP- Mingorl (4.4). LPOvery (0.21.
'
Milwaukee 200 000 000-- 2 7 0
New York 002 Olt OOx- 4 10 0
Travers 05-13) and Moore;

.(1) .

OFFICE
toSICLOSE
AT NOON ON tHURS.l- EAST COURT

all week.

Carter rode with Daley and
Sen. AdlaiE.SieveiiiOnmat
the head ol a parade tD a
CGIIventlon treltll.oo cf the
Illinois Democratic party,
where Carts' delivered bla
standard campalp ttpeach.
Many of the 1M
1111 wilD
!Ined tbe lllreell tii'OUte to .
the hall beld red llarel and
ll&amp;'chera bebiDd l.ba ail' bald
a 1arp lip proclalm1!:
''May« Dl1ey IIIII PI 1""•
Cllrta'." The Ci111J IIUc to
mar carter'l Qllcqo •
... tiM pr 11 1e11 cf a IJI'OUP
ol
antiabortion
demonalrat.ora.
'l'hey -ly dmmed oat a
speech by Cllrta' when they
took Up a chant of "Lilt, llle,
We ..." at a ...,.... cellr
rally late In tbealten-.llld
they also were pr 1 nt at one
point In the ]IIJ'Ide roule.

;

At lanta
60 80 .429 29'h
Thursday 's Results
Philadelphia 4 Chicago 2
St . Lou is 6 Montreal 1
Cinci 4 Houston J, 11 inns .
San Fran 4 Los Angeles 2
San Olego 4 Atlanta 3

(Only gomes scheduled ) ,
Today 's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)

Chicago ( R . Reuschel 11·10)
at Phi ladelphia (CI1rlstenson 11 ·

81,7 :35 p.m.
New York (Lolich 7·12 ) ar
Louis !Denny 9-6). 8:30p.m.

Sr.

Montrea t (Fry man 11· 10) at
Pittsburgh (Cllndelar la 14-5),

8:05p.m.

Cincinnati (Gullett 7·31 at San
Francisco (Knepper 0-0l. 10 :15

p.m.

Kansas City 5, and Minnesota
a few levels and you have to 6 Texas 0.
force yourself to get back on Rtlds t , Ailtros 3:
the ground."
Pinch-hitter Bob Bailey
The Phillles scored four singled In Joe Morgan with
runs in the 8ecmd Inning- the winning run lor
their biggest rally since 1\ug. Cincinnati in the lltil inning
24- with the key hits singles alter the Reds tied the score
by Dave Cash and Larry at 3-3 on a two-run single by
Bowa. The Cubs scored both Morgan In the· ninUi. Rawly
tlleir runs off Lonborg on a East wick won his lith game
single by Larry Biittner in the witil two innings of shutout
sixth inning.
relief while Ken Forsch wa4
Bill Bonham suffered his · the loser .
11th loss against ~ight Giants 4, Dodgers 2:
victories for tile Cubs.
Gary Thomasson's twoCincinnati def~ated run, seventh-inning homer
Hous\on, 4-3, In 11 innings, broke a 2-2 tie and enabled
San Francisco beat Los Jo.hn Montefusco to win hls
Angeles, 4-2, St. Louis topped 15th game against 12 losses
Montreal, 6-1, and San Diego for San Francisco. Los
edged Atlanta, 4-3, in the 1\ngeles had tied the score at
other NL games.
2-2 on Reggie Smith's horner.
In the American League, it Tommy John lost his lOth
was Oakland 2 Chicago 1, game for the Dodgers.
Cleveland 4 Baltimore 3, Cards 6, Expos 1:
Boston 5 Detroit 0, New York
Lynn McGlothen pitched a
4 Milwaukee 2, California 6 four-hitter and drove in three
runs with a pair of singles,
raising his record to 12-13 for
Lynn. Bos 123 477 69 150 .314 St. LOuis. It was the ninth
LeFlore. Det 132 535 90 t67 .312 .complete for McGiotilen 1 who
Gar r , Chi
117 456 55 Ul .309
River&gt;, NY 126 555 89111 .308
Munson, NY 133538 70 165 .307
Carty , Cle
132 479 59 lU .301
For Hospital Cheer
HOME RUNS' ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE : KinO ·
man, NY 34 ; Schmidt, Phil Jl ;
Send The Beautiful
the kind of thing that lifts you

apparent to l&gt;'wtck, suffered a
pulled liamstrlng muscle the
first day of fall practice, but
is expected to be the Rocket
signal-caller against
Mruisachusetts. · He wiU be
backed up by freshman Bob
MitcheU.
Kent State, with one of It$
youngest teams In history,
faces a stiff conference test at
central Michigan.
The Chippewas are paced
by Walt "Smoke" Hodges,
who rushed for more than
1,000 yards last season and a
5.5 yard per carry average.
He has a string of 19 con- Monday, Monday, Chi and
secu live games of over 100 Foster, Cin 29 ; Morgan , Cin 27.
AMERICAN LEAGUE c Nett .
yards rushing.
les, NY 26; L .May, Bait and
Key man In the Kent Bando( Ollk 24 : Jackson, Bait
offensive attack could be 23; Hendr ick. Clev 22.
RUNS BATTED IN·
transfer Art Best, who aveNATIONAL LEAGUE c Fos.
raged 5,9 yards per carry in ter , Cin 114 ; MOrgan . Cln 107 ;
three season at Nvtre . Wlltson, Hou 90 i Schmidt , Ph il
88 ; LU!In&gt;kl. Phil 85.
D&lt;UDe.
AMERICAN · LEAGUE : . L.
Best will team with May , Bait 95 ; Munson , NY 9J ;
Chambliss, NY 90 ; Yastrzem sophomore Andy Ferree and skl
, Bos 88; Mayberry, KC 86.
junior quarterback Mike
STOLEN BASES· .
LEAGUE c TaveWhalen, getting his first ras,NATIONAL
Pitt 53; Mofgan, Cln 52 ;.
starting assignment, In the Brock, SP.L 50; Lo~es. LA 48;
Cedeno, Hou 47 .
Golden Flash backfield.
AM e R I CAN LEAGUE :
"We've crammed a lot of North
, Oak 68 ; LeF lore, Det 56 ;
learning into a short period of Campaneris, Oak. 51; Baylor ,
KC 46.
.
time," said coach DeMis Oak 47 ; Polek,
PITCHING.' ·
Fitzgerald. "But, with so
. Most Victories
NATIONAL LEAGUE ; Jones ,
many young players, you
SO 20·12; Koosman, NY 18.8;
don't know how they will Sullon, LA 18 9; Carllon. Ph il
react under pressUre. We'll 16·6 : Ric hard, Hou .16·14.
AMERICAN LEf!,GUE : Pal·
just have to wait and see how mer
, Bait 20· 12 ; Figueroa, NY
they perform."
17·8; Tiant , Bos 17. 11 : Garland,
Ball16·6; Leonard. KC 16·7,
Et.RNED RUN AVERAGE ·
( based on US Innings pitchedl
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Sea .

struck out two and walktd
none. Don Carrithers waa the
loser for Montreal.
Padres 4, Braves 3:
Tito Fuentes singled with '
two out and tile bases filled to
drive In Doug Rader with the
winning run for San Diego In
the bottom of th.e f\lnt h
inning. Rader started the
ninth with a single and was
sacrificed to s«ond by Frc'&lt;l
Kendall. Two walks and a
forcoout preceded Fuentes'
game-winning hit which gave
reUever Butch Metzger hill
lith win against one".loss.

year on a
4 year certificate of
deposil .
l V2 Pet . per

$1,000.00

mtmmum

.deposit. interest paid
quarterly .
A sub stan t ial penally Is
Invoked on ~Il l certificate
accovn ts w ithdrawn pdor
to th e date of maturity .

SUNSHINER

Meigs Co. Branch

..@

BOUQUET

The Ath ens County
Saving!. &amp; Loan co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Oh io

59 N. Second St ,

ver, NY 2.50 ; Ra u, LA 2.55 ;
Norman . Cin .2.62 ; Jones, SO
2.11 ; Matlack. NY 2.74.

AMERICAN ·LEAGUE: · Fi ·

drych, Del 2.33; Blue, Oak 2.36 ;
Travers, Mi l 2.A6; Pa lmer , Ba~t
2.59 ; Tanana , Cal 2.63. ,
west

W.· L · Pet.

GB

Kansas City
80 59 .576
Oa Y'and
75 64 .SAO A
M ' ~sota
72 10 .507 CJih
Tt.. .... s
63 -76 .453 17
California
63 71 .450 17 11'2
Chicago
· 59 80 .424 21
Thursday 's ResultS
Oakland 2 Chicago I
Boston 5 Detro it 0
Kan City 6 Calif 5. 10 inns .
New York 4 Milwaukee 2
Mi!'lnesota 6 Texas 0
Clevel"nd 4 Balt imore 3
fl)dav 's Probai;Jte Pjtchers
( All Times EDTI
Det roit (Gl ynn 0·0) at Boston
(Cleveland 7·8) , 7 : 30p.m .
Ka nsas City (Hassler 4-9) at
M innesota (Ban e 4-7), 9 p.r:n .
M ilwaukee (Slaton 14· lll at
New York (HUnter 14-14 ). 8:05

p.m .

Oakland (Blue 14.11) at Texas

IBiyleven 11 ·tS l. 8:35p .m.

California (Rvan 12·17) at
Chicago &lt;Johnson 9·13) , 9 p.m .
Cleveland · (Waits 7·5) at
Baltimore [Grimsley 7.6) , 7: 30

p.m.

Saturday's Games
Ollkland at Texas , night
Kansas Ctty at Minnesota
cani fornla at Chic ago
Bait at Ml lw, 2, twi ,night
Detroit at New York
ClfVe at BOston , nigh t

STRIKEOUTS· · ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE; Sea -

v,r, NY 209 ; Rich ard , Hou 178 ;
Montefusco, SF 157 ; Koosman,
NY \56;
Niekro .
Carlton, Phi\ 14'9 .

All

and

AMERICAN LEAGUE ; Ryan .

Cal 260 ; 'Tanana , C:al 222 r .
Bl yleve n, Tex 180; Ecker.slev .
Clev and Hun ter, N Y 154.

Major League Results
By United Press lnternatlonil
National Leag4e ,

Chicago

Phlade l ~hl

000 002 ooo- 2 7 t
040 ooo oox- 4 6 o ·

Bonham , Garman (5 ), Cole ·
man (7) and SWISher , Mitter ·
wald (61 ; LonbOrg (15·9) ancf
Boone . LP- Bonham (8 -11).
Montreal

St. Louis

000 100

ooo- 1

$PECIAL .

UFEllME GUARANTEE MUFFLER

'500 OFF

030 020 Ofx- 6 12 1

Carrith ers, Taylor (8) and
Ca rter ; M cGlothen { 12-13) and
Simmons. LP-Carrlthers (6.
12). HR - St . Louis , Templeton

Il l.
( 11 innings)
Cincinnl 000 000 012 01- 4 13 1
Houston
120 000 000 oo- 3 7 l
Zachry, Sarmiento (S), Bor b0!1 17), Ea,wlck 19), McE ·
nan e
(1 11 and
Bench ;
Forsch
(9 )
and
Andujar ,
Herrmann . WP- Eastwlck (11 .
5) . LP- Fcrsch (4.3) .

v

.ALL OF

SEPTEMBER NO LABOR

TUNI•UP SPECIAL

4 1

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS·
Los Angeles IRau t4.t0l. 10:30 . By United Press International
San Frnclsco 100 00 1 2oo- 4 ~ 1
p.m .
.
BATTING·
Los Angeles 000 000 20Q-- 2 8 2
Houston (Dierker 13·13 and
. (based on l75 at bats)
Montefusco, Lavelle (71 and
Larson 4.6) at San Diego (Jones
NATIONAL LeAGUe.
20·12 and Sawver .t . l), 2. 9 p.m .
G. AB· R. H, Pet. Alexander : John , So sa (8) and
{7).
WPSaturday's Games
Madlock, Chi 126 451 60 153 .339 Pasley , Robles
Ci ncinna ti at San Francisco
Morgan , Cln 121416 t0514t .339 Monlefusco (15 .12). L P- John
Atlanta ( Oal ·Canton 3·5) at

TIRES &amp; BAmRIES
AT
DISCOUNT·PRICES

V-8

'28.00·

6 CYLINDER

'23.95

4 CYLINDER

'19.95

Includes Plugs, Points, Condensor,
. labor.
2.00 EXTRA

1

RESISTOR PWGS ·

We Specialize In Disc Brakes
We Tum Rolols and Drums!

New York at St . Louis
. Ol iver, Pit
109 41 6 59 138 .332 (8 -10) . HR s- San Francisco,
Montreal at PIHsbQh, niQht
Jhn q ne, Ph il 112 376 57 125 .332 Thomasson (6) ; Los Angeles ,
Atlanta at Los Ang , 2, twi .nlght G• ley, Cin tJO496 i01163 .329 Smith ( 16) .
Houston at San Dl~o , nigh t
MaddOX, Phi l 131 477 69 157 .329
Ctncago at Philadelph ia , night
Rose, Cin
141 .575 119 185 .3 22
Foster , Cin
128 505 79157 .311
Gernim o, Cln 129 436 53 135 .310
Ameri'::,}eagu~
Montnez , Atl 14 1 566 60 175 .309
w.. L.· Pet. GB Cruz , HOU 115 375 43 116 .309
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
· S5 52 .620 New York
G. AB· R. H, Pet
13 65 .529 12 112
Baltimore
71 68 .Stl 15 McRae , KC 128 449 66 l5ol .343
Cleveland
67 72 .482 19 Brett. KC 137 558 83 189 .339
Boston
63 75 .457 22'h Bostock, Min 112 411 61136 .33 1
Detroit
62 75 .453 23 Carew, Min 138 531 85 175 .330
M ilwaukee

HERE'S THE 015.

and Fl,k . LP- Ruhle (9-nl . HR

- Boston , Rice (19) .

end Humphrey : Leonard , Min ·
gorl (8 ) and Martinez, Stinson

Daley give~ C~er· the whoie thing
Carter's elecllm campaign
has received the official
bleaslng of Clicago's aUpowerful Mayor Richard J.
Daley · in a spectacular
torchlight parade that
enthused the candidate u he
aeeka more ethnic and labor
support.
T he
Demo c r a tIc
presidential nominee rode
Uirough Chicago's streelll In
an open car with Daley
Thursday night u banda
played, thou11nds ol the
party faithful cheered and
flreworb llgbted up the nlg1t

Phils end skid with 4·2 triumph

Today'•

Holtzm~n

HR~&amp;-New

(13.8} and Munson .
York, Munson 114 ),

Chambl"s (16).

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11th
· UNTIL 4 P.M •.

..FAMILY OUTING"
OF
CONSTRUCTION &amp; GENERAL LABORERS
UNION LOCAL NO. 1353

"GOOD LUCK"
To All Area

FOOTBALL TEAMS
from:

New York

~-.·-

Clothing House

HERE'S WHY IT'S ASTIHI.

I. A high voltage ignition
system and an efficient
combustion chamber
means it11 start work
when you do. Every time.
z. A "no-thumbs:' fully
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lets you concentrate on
cutting. Not oiling .

3. Hot chamber magne·
sium die·casting makes the
housing tougher. And ihe
whole saw lighter.
4. Balanced fuel and oil
tank capacities keep you
from having to refill one
when there's still plenty
in the other.

5, It's been deSigned to
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6. And by lasting twice as
long it'll really only cost
about hall as much.

as

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CHARLESTON
OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY-11 A.M. TIL 10 P.M.

CAMDEN PARK
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Your Sportsminded Store

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
Brake Service - Front End Alignment
600 E. Main St.
· · 992-2094
Pomeroy, o.

'•

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fridav

~ot . 10, 1976

Carter challenges Ford
oR Pentagon efficiency
.

'

By LEWIS LORD
\lalted Pnu IDteruattooal
Jimmy
Carter
and
President · ford won't
confront each other face to
face In debate for nearly two
more weeks, but a major
exchange already is under
way between . the two
candidates.
Ford, claiming Carter
goaded him Into It, accused
the Democratic nominee
Thlll1day of suggesting the
destruction of America's
defensive alliances.
Carter, campaigning in
Springfield, Dl., promptly responded that Ford's attack on
his defense poliCies "bears no
relationship to the facts."
The exchange actually
started . Wednesday when
Carter, addressing the B'nal
B'rlth
convention
.in
Washington, repeaied his caU
for defense budget cuts,
gradual overseas troop
reductions and limitationil ·on
"cynical and dangerous"
11'11111 sales that ~o to both

~

sides of the Ar-ab-Israeli
conflict.
Fvrd went hefvre the same
Jewish convention and said
that Carter, In his Wednesday
remarks, had "kicked off our
debates."
" Now, 11
said
Ford.
departilig from his prepared
text, " i''s my turn at bat."

The President accused
Carter of proposing "defense
budget cuts that would
cripple our abUity to supply
or sustain our friends, bans
oo nuclear tests by cur allies,
a nuclear strategy of massive
retaliation policies which
would invite ·a major crisis
with our aUies, including
Israel."
" If we did any of these,"
Ford said, "it would be
impossible to defend our
allies, Including Israel."
Carter replied that the
issue wasn't a strong national
defense, to which he said he
was clearly committed.
The issue is waste and
0

3:- The ~lly Sentlnel,Middleport.-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept.JO,I976

i&lt;o:·::::&lt;:·:;·«:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:;;·:·:;-:; 0&gt;:,:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·

mismanagement in the
"Mr. Carter finds it
Defense· Department and coovenient to ignore that it
throughout the federal was
a
Republican
government," Carter said. ' administration, which
"!say there is at least 5to 6 achieved
the
highest
per cent waste in the emigration rate of Soviet
Pentagon budget. Mr. Ford Jewry in history - ~old
says there is not. I say U we over what it had been under
cut the fat and frUis and get the
last
Democrat
back
to
a
defense . administration," Dole said.
establishment designed to
Sen. Walter Mondale, the
fight it will be stronger, .not Democratic vice presidential
weaker. Mr. Ford says there nominee, urged members of
is nv fat to cut.
Uie United Auto Workers in
"! am content to let the Detroit to drum up support
American peoj,le decide who lor Carter. Mondale said
is right," Carter said.
Ford believes "we can beat
Sen. Robert Dole, the inflation
by
putting
Republican vice presidential Americans out of work."
nominee, renewed the GOP
Carter's wife, Rosalynn,
attack before tile New York campaigning In Colwnbia,
convention of the Zionist S.C., said in an interview that
her SouUiem Baptist husband
Orgaf11zation of America.
Carter's criticism of the "is not an imposterh Qn
administration's alleged. religion .
failure to get more Jews out
"Jimmy's religion is very
of Russia, Dole said , is important lo him ," Mrs.
"cynical hypocrisy and Ca rter said. "He says his
represents another Carter religion is the most important
!Up-flop."
tiling in his life."

LOTTERY WINNERS
This wee~' • wlnalng Pot
0 Gold numbers were:
Five dtglt number lfli45 (slx· olll~two-fotll"
five).
'l'bree digit oumber - m
(fo... two-seveo).
· Three digit oumber - 151
(IIIJie.flve-oae).

Mao praised by Nixon
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI) - Former President
Richard M. Nixon, the Jut
known American to villi Mao
Tile-tung, in 1 rare, t11'0118gt
statement praised the
Olinese leader u a ''nlan of\
Immense physical oourage

Cv nta cted Thursday before a final ' decision was
morning, Whaley said he has made. At the present time, a
not decided whether he will substitute teacher is filling
apply lor tile position again, the position of outdoor
saying the controversy over recreation te ache r, school
his hiring "has been a night- officials said.
The AEA had claimed that
mare" and "tough on me and
my family." He also said the the board violated its
students may have been most agreement wi th tile teachers
association because the
hurt by the controversy.
The school board scheduled position Of outdoor recreation
a special meeting · Friday teacher was not advertised
morning ·to discuss
the witllin the school system and
did not aUow other teachers
decision.
Whaley was hired by the in the system to apply lor the
school board In June to fill the position.
B.oth the Ohio Revised Code
position of head basltetbaU
coach and outdoor recreaijon and the Athens City School
instructor, but the AEI\ Professional Policies
challenged the hiring, Agreement provide teachers
claiming the school board witllin the school system
violated both a master should be given first con,
agreement with the teachers sideraijon. lor any vacancies
and the state's "Sunshine that occur and that all
Law."
teachers are employed first
In July, Judge Howard as teachers with supissued
a
temporary plemental co ntracts
restraining order, halting the receiving secondary conhiring of Whaley so additional sideration and these are to be
evidence could be presented aUotted according to the area

Glenn, Carter together
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- U.S.
9111. Jabn Glem, ~.and
[IN••!f.l'lllc pnllldentlal nomlaee Jimmy Carter are on
tbe beat cf terms, despite
Cartlr's ~election of Walter
Mondlle owr Glenn aa his
vice presidential

mmingmate.

DIDII!a beetle l)lorlllng of

cautpligJing for Carter on a

downtown COlumbus city
block uti at a suburban hwle
'I'IQnday, c.rter and Glenn
wwe DeVIll' lliCII'e than an
~m~'slenitb

apart.

When uked If he bad asked
carter why he was not
dialeD; Glemt said "No, he
cldn1 tell me and I didn't ask.
It wu one cf tbe toughest
' declllona he ever made and It
wu his- and his alone."
Cartlr waa Glenn's bouse

guest Wednesday night.
"Mter we got to our home
fr&lt;m the airport, we stayed
up for about an boll' and a
half discussing campaign
matters and his endorsement
of the bill I am cosponsoring," said Glenn.
Later Thursday, at an
airport news conference P'ior
to Carter's departure for
more campaigning in Dlinois,
Carter pubiicaUy enlorsed a
bill Glenn bas co-sponsored.
'nle legislatioo, which is
scheduled for Senate floor
debate later this month,
would require most all
federal
agencies
to
periodically justify their
existence or be eliminated.
"We are very glad to bave
his endorsement," said Glenn
"It will do us a IU good." .

Glenn said he woula campaign for Carter as much as
he could after Congress
adjourns In early October.
Glenn predicted Carter
would win Ohio Nov. 2, but
said "It won't be a sho&lt;Hn."
Glenn also praised the
organization Carter's Ohio
campaign manager, Daniel
Horgan, has formed.
Horgan, a native of New
Jersey, was named last
month to replace Ted Celeste.
"Dan Horgan is doing a
great job. I thought his being
from out.of..tate mlght be a
problem, but that's not true,"
said Glenn.
Glenn said that with
Horgan running Car!f!r's
campaign for Ohio's 25
Electoral College votes,
inter-party squabbles would
be avoided.

DR. LAMB

Surviving ~uses would
WASIDNGTON (UP! ) get
an additional eumptloo
Mter almost three years of
of
either
$250,000 or bne-balf
effort, congressional ta'i:
the
gross
estate.
writers have produced the
Elslate
tal:
relief would be
final version of a major tax
revision bill Uiat wiD touch phaaect In ov~ a five-year
ev ·e ry . American's period, after which the
estlglated 121,000 estates now
pocketbook.
. A conference cmunlttee subject to the tu: would be
completed the · task of pared down to 50,000 - an
reconciling the differences
between House .
Senate
versions of the massive bill
Thursday night after a flurry
of last-minute decisions,
including a surprise decisioo
to include significant estate
tax revisions.
The legislation, the first
major tax bill since 1969,
ctl!tinues the CUITI!Ilt $17.3
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - State
billion in tax cuts throug~
1977, while hundreds of pages Auditor Th&lt;mas Ferguson
of "reform" provlsioos will said today he has proposed
raise a net $1.6 bWlon In new legislatioo which would allow
pooling of the cash balances
federal tax revenue.
of
nine separate state funds to
In 1978 and later )'ears, as
help
tile state "temporarily
estate tax changes come into
.
reilolve
its seriot11 casb flow
play, the federal revenliO!
problems."
gain will drop to about $985 .
Under ferguson's proposal
million a year.
the
total · operating fund
Dozens of Special interests,
would
consist of money in the
ranging from railroads Ill
working parents, will benefit General R.evenue,
Rotary,
from tile bill while dozens IX Departmental
of competence of the teachers
Federal
RevenliO!
Sharing,
others .w ill . lose, such as
desiring the extra . assign· wealthy .professionals who WUdlife, Waterway safety,
ments.
have used tax shelters to Highway Safety, Highway
Howard ruled that the avoid taxation on their excess Operating, Liquor Control'
school board breached its inc ~me.
Rctary and State Lottery
agreement
with
the
President Ford is expected Funds.
association when it voted to to sign it despite bitter
Ferguson said certain
hire Whaley by not ad- opposition to one provision crlt.lcal state obligations
. vertising the pos1 lion wiUtin denying certain foreign tax could be paid from 1hese
the school system and not breaks to COOlpallies that funds 1 such as Aid to
offering already employed cooperate in international Dependent Children, and
teachers the opportunity to boycotts such as the Arab health care .payments, wben
apply for the position.
boycott of Israel. The necessary. Use of the
"It is understandable tha t administration complained mechanism would be on an
filling the position of head Ibis would bainper their emergency basis only,
basketball coach would be of Middle East peace efforts. Ferguson emphasized.
great interest to the defend"The concept Is not
Olanges in estate tax had
ant board and the community been demanded by farmers original," said ·Ferguson,
at large, but the defendant and othel's who said heirs pointing out that 10 nearby
must not let this interfere were being !creed to seU states have 90111e form of
with their commitment by family property to pay the cash consolidation or
policy anc! agreement to its tax.
operating lund ''from whicb
primary concern with em·
The major estate tax to pay their bills."
Ferg111011 said the total
ploying teachers" Howard change is to greatly increase
said in his decision.
operating
lund concept would
the current ~.ooo exemption
The AEA also challenged - the amount of estate on be enacted into law during
the hiring of Whaley by the which no tal: must be paid. the upcilming legislative
school board on the grounds This would be changed to a ·session as a temporary
that the board did not adhere tax credit that would be the measure to expire June 30,
to the state's Sunshine Law, equivalent cf $~,666ln 1977, 1977.
" It would ease a recwTeot
requiring open meetings.
gradually increasing over
Howard rUled however that five years to a permanent cash imbalance In the slate's
the school board, . "at least $175,625 in 1981 and later General Fund while aUowlrtg
the legislature time to
minimally complied with years.
methodically consider a
Ohio's Sunshine Law."
pennanent correction of the
He ruled tha~ the comslate's cash flow for the fl.scal
plianCe witil the Sunshine . GODWIN PICKED
WASHINGTON (UPI)
biemlum beginning July 1,
Law "does not overcome
GOv.
Mills
E.
Godwin
has
1'Tn," said Fergu&amp;OII.
what the court has found to be
been
named
honorary
"It seems to me to be
a faUure of the defendant
(school board) to comply chairman of the · Virginia rldiculotll for tbe state of
with its statutory and con- President Ford Qmmittee OhJo to say to Its c-edltors
tractual ~uties with respect and Ford campaign officiaLs 'we can't pay you' when we
to the procedure It foUowed say tiley e:r;pect him to be a have cash totaling upwards of
a billion dollars on band at
leading up to the adoption of big help in the Soulll.
are
fortunate
indeed
"We
any me time In the various
its resolution of June 21, 1976,
tbat
Governor
Godwin
is
accounts,"
said Ferguson.
employing Whaley."
joining
President
Ford's
"It's
a1ao
very
coatly of
The AEA had also
campaign,"
James
A.
Baker
scbool districts who could be
challenged the school board's
hiring of Whaley on tbe said Thursday as he forced to borrow on
grounds that he had not yet announced the appointment. anticipated local tal: receipts
obtained certificaijon from " We expect him to be ·because the state camot
inflliO!ntial in otr effort to make
Its
regular
the state.
carry
other
SouUiern
states
distributions
because
of lack
Altilough Howard ruled In
as
weU
as
Virginia."
of
money
in
the
General
favor of the board on the
Fund.
certification issue, he said the
" What I propose, in
action by the board, "may be ISRAEU GUESTS
BEVERLY Hlllll, Calif. essence, Is that the state put
a dubious education policy to
employ teachers who are not (UP!) - Simcba Dlnitz, Isra- all the money from the nine
certified at the time of their el's ambassador to the United fundi Into me pot and pay Its
make
Its
States, and Teddy Kollek, b11ls, . or
employment."
mayor of Jerusalem, will be distributions, from thll pot,
principal speakers at the oo an emergency baala ooly," .
three-&lt;Jay International FaU said Ferguson. "Book
l.eadenhip Conference of balances would still allow
what money Is In what
State of I!l'ael Bonds.
account
at any one time and
They will bolll addreBS
dinner meetings at the all acoounts would balance
conference, which began oot at the end of the fl.scal
year.H
Thlll1day night.

am

Problem of
cash flow

solvable

A look at flu 50 years ago
and grandma , who had
':tA~;o:~E.
Lamb, M.D.
DR. LAMB ...: caught the flu from me. Pa
I
There's so much talk about was afraid because grandthe Ou. I am over 70 and had father couldn't even make a
It real bad when It was here cup of tea. Being from the old
before. Igotltbelng in the big country he sure cured both of
pande, November 11, when us, Grandma In three days
Warld Wll' I ended. I was and weeks later for me.
Here's the cure. Laugh If
llvq with my grandparents.
They aaid It was a punish· you like but it did the trick.
ment for aU of us. We should He put camphorated oil In
haft been on our knees, not goose grease, heated It and
out enJoyinl! ountelves when rubbed our chest. Then he
other people had such mlxed up mustard and put
the oil and goose grease In it
bMrtec:he.
Wtll I IUN did have a bad between two sheets of red
Ume of ft. No doctor came to · flame!. My chest was red for
. _ , Ibpltall wouldn't awhile; it sure was hot .
late aiiy more patients. Here's what he gave us for
Rella,. and frlenda didn't medicine, He took heavy old·
go IIIII' each other. We didn't fashioned molasses and put
haft paiD pllla In lboae days. . the rum in it. He put some in a
Itwueutor oil, haklnlaoda, cup of hot water and It reaUy
electric oil, cunpborated oil, made me sweat.
Today all these old·
· even coal oil.
I am lllld I wu out of my fashioned remedies are
lllld. Ole cf my unclea left 1 laughtd a~ but lt worked. I'm
bcJIIt If dirt rum, heavy still around .. My grand·
ldlld, on lba lfep. My fll'and• parents died when they were
fatber bad to look after me over 70. The oil! boy knew his

.,

.

~

onions, even though he
couldn't boil water. What I'd
·like to know is what was the
dark molasses and dark
heavy rum? Was it a case of
get better or die? It sure was
hard to take alter you got on
the mend.
DEAR READER. - Thanks
for giving us a colorful picture of the flu more than SO
years ago. From the volume
of letlers I have received
from people who lived
through the first worldwide
flu epidemic it seems the
treatment you described was
pretty standard, with emphasis on rum and whiskey.
Alcohol is still used in the
treatment of colds and flu by
many people . as a home
remedy. It may be a sedative
and help people to feel better
in that sense . but It does
nothing to combat the virus
infection causing the Illness.
The only way to treat the
flu properly Is to prevent It
and we can do this today even

Olineae-Amll'ican !rlllndlhlp
bad beCOme lndilpenllble tD

the lnteresta of bolh our
Pallonl,"
NI.Jton aald
Thuntlay.
The fCl'tlMI' chief aecutlft,
IS, flrlll met wilb Mao In an
maprecede~Md Illite v1a1t u
Prtlldlla. 1111 IICODd vialt
,waa IMl February U I
private cllllell lllll'ly two

·
.
k
h
d
E·very poeketboo touc e r,::~·f~r ~ ;:~~

Whaley hiring did not cJmply
with law according tojudge
Athens high school will
apparently have to find
another basketball coach
lollO'Irinl! a judge's decision
earlier this week.
Accardlng to a story In
Thursday 's A then s
M~er·, COmmon Pleas
Judie Lowell Howard ruled
that the Athena aty School
llolrd's hiring of Bill Whaley
·u ould901' recreation teacher
and bead bukelbaU coach is
nuD and void because the
achool board did not comply
willl alate law or adhere to
the tenna of an agreement
with the Athens Educalion
AlloclaUon (AEA).
Howard's ruling ordered
that the school board should
perfocm Its dulies according
to tbe qreement with the
AEA and means the sc!Jool
biMnl wUI probably have to
go through the hiring
)II'OCedure again to fill the
pcllitlan cf head basltetbaU
coacb and outdoor recrealion
leec:ller·

and
Ideological
detl!mllnation" and quoted a
poem by Mao.
" As
leadera
who
1ep; ented totally dlffaenl
Jjtllot!ophlee and vieWS, we
both recot~nlred when we met
In Peking In 1972 that

Uiough that was impossible
with . the epidemic you survived. That Is why vac·
cinations are so important.
Some of the other
By ROBERT KAYLOR
medicines may help shrink
CfflCAGO (UPI) - Jimmy
the nasal lining and make
breathing easier. Supportive
ca re in terms of adequa~
ftfJ DAII. \' SIHflHIL
'
DfVOfiO TO THf '
flui\Ls and nourishment is the
IHrtaiiTOI
best that can be offered. The
MIHIS.MASONA. ...A
(HdrJa L. JANfdHIU
rest of the treatment is for
complications. Bacterial
lltOIIfrf HOI'UCH
(ltf' ...,..,.
complications, such as some
='ulllilhH ••~ ••e&gt;ert S.tur•r ~
pneumonias, can be treated TIM Ohio 'f'••r Mlllhlflt ~y.
and that will help a lot if there 111 C.WI It,, , _ , . , , 0Wo .., ..,
lutln"• Office lth~• "1-UM,
is a worldwide epidemic.
,._,."'·'"'·
s..n4 ,.... !Mit.fe ,... ..
For more information ltllfOf'a.l
--about flu and related cold-like ..._...• .,. Ohkt.
,
:~
Illness readers can send SO W•tl · OrlfHth ~y, tnc., lei•1111111 ._,....,.... •••-· rn n.1rt
cents for The Healtil Letter ti,..IH
.. ...wTorii,N ,, , 1MU,
i
number 3-2, ,Colds and Flu Awe
s...-..e,,~ ,..,": o.u~ ..,.
.....,_ ..-a.w. 71 - t t ,_
Group, Prevention and
WH61. ly Mot« lou•• wt.r. ..,..._
Treatment. Send a long, ..
,.,k• not ••UaW., OM -•h.
stamped, self-addressed u.,. .•.,. ..... lfl Oh l ~ of141 w..... ~
l'-, IJI.Mt II• Mon•h.. •11.111fhtejt
envelope for malllng. Ad· ,_,.._,
17 ••• ltMwhotre IBM , . . ,
dress your letter to Dr. Lamb
\i• Me•UM IIJ.JI; Ttw. ........., tJ.Jt,
In aore of Ulis newspaper, ,.,.."',..,,.,..,.,..ea ._....._ .......,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019. · ' - - - - - - - - - 1

estimated 2 per cent of aU
estates. Curbs allo were Pill
on "generatlon..,klpplng
trusts" · ·- used' by the
wealtby to avoid Inheritance
tu:esfor nlong asa ceniii!'Y.
The bill alao:
- Places curbs on tu:
shelters In real estate,
farming 111d other lnduslrles.
- Slrelgthens and e:rp~~~ds
tbe minimum tu on the
wealthy who use tax.free
preference lncune to JIIY
lltlle or no n!gular tu.
- Uberalllee credits and
deductlons taken by manY
citizens, for Instance
:Stu:~~-: th=
, . mJr.e "-"•ctl
wbo don t 1te
,-- 0111.
- Tightens otber tax
break&amp;, such u the sick PlY
ezcluslon and business
deductions lor rental
vacation h&lt;mes.
- Reviles the capital gains
tax to discourage speculatioo
through a 12-month_holding
period, while allowing up to
$3,000 a year In ordinary
inc&lt;me to be offset by capital

losses.
- GIVe. taxpayers new
rights In dealing with the
Internal RevenliO! ~ce,
1x1t takes away rights such as ··
allowing Social Security
numbers to be used for
welfare purposes such as
tracking down runaway
fathers.

~!

partleulai'ly IJn..
prelled by hll . profound
undentandlnl oot oo1,y of the
'•
fl'Obl,eDll of his own ......,_,
but of the objective reaUtlel
of the world lltuatlon.
· "I am confident lbat
whoever succeetis Oia1rman
Mao wUJ eootlnue to work
toward tbe goal cf imJro'llnl
relations bet'lf1len the
·
bU f Cliina
People's Repu c 0
.
and the United Statee ci
America and belplng to
rebuild .....cture of
a """
peace
~~-~. Pacific and for tbe
Nlmn deacrlbed Mao u "a
!Dtally dedicated and
prlllffilltiC Communist ... I
unique man In 1 generation ci
great revolutlooary leaders"
and lauded ~lm as "a
visionary poet, deep!;
steeped In the hlstcry of.the
Chinese people."
Nlmn quoted a poem he
said Mao wrote several years
ago:
"'We had much to do
quick

'

..... ....
!.,.,
...e ""'-ea
•..., spina
'And time IS short
'And so a morning and an
evening count"'
"There can be no doubt tbat
he macl!l h!i morning and bJa
evening 'count 1n workln8 for
the vision he saw and for the
principles In which he so
strongly believed," Nlilon
said.

Democrats win
budget battle
WASHINGTON (UPI) Democrats In Congress WOO
tbe great debate over the
budget hands down. In fact,
when It came to the final
moment, lllere was almost oo
debate.
•
The House, by a vote of 'JZ1
to 151 ThUI'Iday, approved
$413.2 ~n in spending by
tbe federal government lor
tbe IIBcal year beginning Oct.
1. The Senate, by a vote of :;5
to 23, approved $412.8 bWlon.
A House-Senate conference
ammittee planned to Iron
out
relatively
minor
differences between the two
JX'oposed budgets and send
the Dna! version back tD both
houses for final passage next
week.
Both Ule House and Senate
versim caU lor abou\ $19
billion more In spending than
President ford propelled in
January and some $14 blllloo
more than Ford's budget
revlaed at mldyear, which
reflected some congressional
decl.alons Ford bad opposed.
The House and Senate ver-

sions include virtuaUy all the
money Ford requested for
delen~e, more than he asked
for jo])s and other domestic
programs, and tbey reject $10
bilJion ·In new tax culll he

SUSAN MOVES
WASHINGTON (UP!) SUaan Ford has moved out of
the While Htiuse and Is living
with tbree junior college
cleeanata in a townhouae
8CI'OB8 the Potomac River in
suburban Aleundrla, Va.
!lleUa Rabb Weldenfeld,
Betty Ford's preu lleCretary,
said
Thursday
Ule
President'&amp; 19-year~ld
daughter made the move with
the a)JIII'Oval of her parents
and wlll remain In the
townhouse untll she starts
cia es in January at the
University of Kansas.

DOLE TO SPEAK
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Republican vice presldantlal
nominee Robert J. Dole wUI
be principal speaker Sept 21
at the 1976 OhJo ReptibUcan
C«tvenlion.
Republican Stat~ .
O!alnnan Kent B. McGough
said Tlllnday wer 2,000 ·
delegates, alternates and
guests from aCI'OStl the stale
will attend ·the c111ventkll.
Other speakers will Include
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohlo,
Gov. James A. Rbcdee and
slate Senate Minority Leader
Michael J. Maloney.

proposed.
All year loog, Ford lind bla .

aides had told C«tgreu the
budget It was fashioning
would run the risk of re-.
igniting Inflation, slowing
economic recovery and
worsening unemployment.
Demticrata in Congress
contended their budget would
a-eate · a miUion more lobe
than Ford's withOOJt risk of
new Inflation and would be a
step toward a balanced
"full
budget
and
employment" (usually
defined u 4 per cent unemployment) by 1~.
When the Issue reached the
Senate
Thursday
n.o
Republican rose to alate
ford's oppos!Uoo, althougll
some
speeches
were
prepared for later ln8ertlon in
the C«tgresslonsl Record.

.........

........ ..........,.. ,.,........

~rriltr

s...........

v

ally.
It was a ll'adltlooal gesture

Harry Trtman win bla upaet

election in 1948. But the
traditional torchlight
blelllng wu withheld from
• George McGovern In 1m.
"Chicago was abaolutely
u n b e II e v a b I e , ' • 1 n
e:rhuberant Carter told
welcomers on his arrival In
MUwaukee later Thureday
night. ''Tbere were h~
cf thouaands of people In the
streelll ... there waa 1 llleldy .
roar of ~ 1r11m the
beginning cf tile ]lll'llde all
the way to the end. It never
stopped."

Today,Carterwutowlnd
up tbe llrat week of hll fall
campaign with a atop In a
5eriUn dlltrlet cf MUwaukee
and than fly 011 tD Florida tD

which bosee,t of the Cook
County Democratic Cl'ganlza·
tlon have bestowed upon
pruldentlal candlclatee they add!• lbe Internalillllal AJ.
haveaupported.li led to Jot.n aoclaliOIIcfMachlnllllaunkll.
F. Kennedy's crucla1 victory The llhnk and labor m Is I .
In the state In 1960 and helped Jll\ta'n he hal been foUowtnc

..

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICIIMAN
UP! Sporll FAller

NEW YORK (UPI) - Ballplayers love to nit-pick. II they
can't find anyooe better, freli,uenUy they'll nit-pick one another
and that's what Jay Johnstone and Gary Maddox were doing
now.
They were on the subject of playing Ute outfield. Whenever
he wants any of his outfielders to move, Danny Ozark usually
moves !hem himself. Sometlmes, though, Gary Maddox shifts
them from center field and that was what he and Johnstone,
who platoons with Ollie Brown In right, were nitpicking about
In the Phlllles' dubhouse.
"You move me one way, Ozark moves rne another,"
Johnstone complained.
Maddox, playing solitaire, never bothered taking his eyes off
the cards.
"You don't move anyway," he answered, dryly. "Anytlme
somebody tells you sometillng, you just go b4!ck to your same
old spot."
·
What was this, dlasenslolt among the Phlllles? Was this a
sign they were gettlng on each other's nerves over a tailspin
which threatens to blow thetr mlntis as well as any chance they
ever had of winning ihe division title In the National League
East alter.having led It by 15'h games less than three weeks
ago?
It wasn't anything like that at all.
.
The back-and.forth between Jay JohnSton and Gary Maddox
wu merely some of the usual shop talk you hear in any big
league clubhouse, the kind of talk that easily could be mlataken
for quarrelsome dissent or lingering resentment when actually
It's nothing more than a couple of ballplayers with tile same
team givrng each other the same little needle they ·do every
day and night of the season.
You can tell there 's trouble when players on Ute same team
suddenly STOP talking to each other; there's never too much
of a problem though as long as everybody is talking to each
other, and til at's the case now with the Phillies.
There's no dissension, ito panic among them. They realize
they're backsliding and they have a chance to blow the whole
box of biscuits. They'd have to be deal, dumb 'and btind not to
know that, because they hear and see suggestions of it
everywhere they go. Everybody keeps reminding them of 1964
when the PhiWes blew a 61'.-game lead with only 12 to go, and
the present Phils keep reminding everybody those were 25
different guys.
Yes, Danny Ozark is concerned, but when a team goes into
the ~Ind. of slump the ·Phillies hav~, how much can any
manager possibly do' Not much.
'"I've talked with my players," Ozark told me. "They've
made some mental mlstslt:es In tlie past two weeks, which is a
little hard to understand beeause they didn 't make hardly any
tile whole season long, but when a player makes a mistake he
feels worse ~bout it than you do. You don 't make him feel
better by chewing him out. What I usually do is talk to him
about it the next day, alter he has bad a chance to think about
. it. Why put more pressure on a player when he's already
tense? It only makes him tenser."
None of the PhiUies have spent their World Series' shares yet
and few,are even thinking as far ahead as the Reds and the
playoffs. Theullmmediate concern right now js beating the
Cubs. The Phils aren't as down as you mlght think. They're
, aware most of Uieir lead is gone, but they don't act as if they
tilink the Pirat,es already have tilem beat.
· "!don 't feel anybody's goon~ beat ine," says second baseman Dave Cash, not in any bragging sense at aU.
"We have to hang in there and grind it out," he says. "We've
. come too far to give up' now. ! rem!!ffiber w~en I was with the
Pirates we had a rough speU like we're ha vlng here now. The
Cardinals and Mets were behind us and we lost 13 out of 15. In
~ aU that time, tilough, we,lost only a half game in the standings
, because every time we'd lose, they'd lose."
: It has been different tbis time.
The Phlllies can't expect anybody to help them. They're
• going to have to win it all by themselves or else be remem·
bered forevermore as the team that blew one of tile biggest
~ leads In baseball history.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sportl Wrller
Jim Lonborg said it ''might
have been a little too much"
and Manager Danny &lt;nark
said It "gave everybody a
twinlde down the spine."
They had lost three streight
games and .11 of their last 12,
cutting their 15\'.!.game lead
· to 41'.! and returned home to
face
fans
generally
considered among tile most

ftckle in sports. .
Pirates to five games In the
Bul as Ule PhiWes ran onto National League's Eastern
the field to face the Chicago Division.
Cubs Thursday night, the
''That had to he stimulating
crowd of 2'1 ,194 rose and gave to everyone on the club,"
them a 9tkecond ovation, cmunented &lt;nark. "It gave
which amounted to a everybody at winkle down the
tremendous
vote · of spine."
confidence.
"It mlght have been a little
. The Ph!Uies lived up to that too much for us to cootend
"vote" as they defeated the with," said Lonbotg, who
Cubs, 4-2, and increased their pitched a seven-hitter and
lead over the idle Pittsburgh raised hi.s record to 15-9. "It's

Miami faces Marshall
United PreniDteroatloaal

game against Syracuse
wiUiout fullback Dan Seleet,
'Although saddled with ita the Falcons' leading 1975
first opening game loss since rusher.
1967, Miami and coach Dick · 8aleet spralped a knee in
Crum aren't ready throw in practice last week and
doctors ruled him out of the
tile towel.
The Redsklns, pre«ason Syracuse game, and possibly
pick to win their fourth next week too.
straight Mid-American
In the cinly other meeting
Conference football title, between the two, ihe Falcoos
were beaten 14-10 last burled the· Orangemen 41·14
Saturday by North Carolina In 1973, but coach Don Nehlen
on a controverSial ttlck play. warns things will be much
"We played well enough to different this time around.
have won," said Crwn, and
"Thi.s will be a very big
then warned, "but ooe game game fQr Syracuse,'' said
doesn't make a season. We Nehlen. " It wasn't that way
just have to pick up and go back In 1973 when we played
from there."
·
tbem. This coUld be the beSt
Miami faces MarshaU at Syracuse team in about the
Huntlngton, W.Va., Saturday last 10 years. It should be a
and the Thundering Herd of super game."
coach Frank Ellwood could
Although the Falcons will
have picked a better Ume to be missing Saleet- who will
get in the way of the be replaced by sophomore
Redsklns.
Steve Holovacs-Nehlen has
Marshall, beaten 31-14 in its a healthy Dave Preston for
opener by Morehead (Ky.) tbe first time in over a year.
State, has dropped 13 straight
Preston, a 5-11, 200pound
games to Miami, the last two senior, was the nation's fifth
by 42-0 and 00.0 scores, and It · leading rusher as a
could be worse this year.
sophomore with 1,414 yards,
Other games this week m but was injured off and oo
tile yet abbreviated Ohio most of 1975.
college schedule · finds . Toledo, playing witbout aUBowling Green at Syracuse, America quarterback Gene
Kent State at Central Swick for the first time In
Toledo
at three years, faces a
Michigan,
Massachusetts, Central State Massachusetts team which
at Morris Brown (Ga.), was 8-2 last year.
Ashland at Franklin (Ind. ),
Jeff Hepinstail, heirDefiance at Albion (Mich.)
and Michigan State at Ohio
.State in d/lylight cootests.
Night games include
CinCinnati at Tulane,
Youngstown State at Dayton,
Temple at Akron and Adrian
Malor League Standings
(Mich.) at Blulf!Dn. ·
.
By United Pnss International
Sophomore quarterback
National League
Larry F6rtner was one• of
East
L. · Pet. GB
Miami's bright spots last Philadelphia W.·
85 53 .616
week against the Tar Heels. Pittsburgh
80 58 .580 5
72 66 ' .522 13
Fortner completed 12 of 23 New York
Chicago
63
77 .450 23
passes for 224 yards and Sf. Louis
61 75 . 449 23
47 89 .346 37
nearly pulled the game out ~ t real
West
lor the Redskins in the
W.. L.· Pet. GB
closing minutes.
Cincinnati
90 51 , .638
Bowling Green, expected to ~~~~~e.les ;~ ~- j~ ~~
be Miami's top challenger for San Diego
66 71 ..462 25
the MAC title, goes Into its San Francisco 64 78 .451 26112

Bench paces win
EASY

to INSTAll

4" SEWER &amp;
DRAIN PIPE
JUST

27e
PER FT.

•
;

AVAILABLE IN
250 FOOT ROU.S

'

BAUM'S TRUE

VALUE STORE
985-3301
CHESTER, 0.

HOUSTON (UPI) - That
rumbling you hear on the
Oncinnati Reds may just be
the awakening of Johnny
Bench's bat.
Bench, who has been both·
ered by an injury to his right
shoulder most ol the season,
cracked out three hits and
drove In a run In the Reds' 4-3
win over Houston.
The victory, coupled with
Los Angeles' 4-3 loss to San
Francisco, gave the 'Reds a 10
game lead In the National
League West In their drive lor
a second consecutive pennant
and World Series cham·
plonshlp.
.' The Reds won the game
In the 11th inning on an error
by Houston rookie second
baseman Alex Taveru.
Joe . Morgan 's two-run
single in the ninth inning tied
tile score at 3-3, and he scored
the winning run In the lith.
With one out, Ken Griffey hit

an easy roller to Taveras, but
the rookie threw the ball to
the dugout for a two-base
error. It was Taveras's first
majoc league game .
Morgan was walked
Intentionally and while
Griffey tried to steal 2nd,
Morgan moved to third and
scored on pinch-hitter Bob
Bailey's sirigle.
Rawly Eastwick, 11-5, got
the win and Will McEnaney
picked up his seventh save.
American League
ooo'oo1 000-- t

~hie ago

no
Oakland
on 000 oox- 2 8 0
eret
(9·9)
end
Esslan,
Downing 161 ; Norris. Todd (21 ,
Lindblad 161, . Fingers 181 and
Tenacec WP- Todd (1 .SI . HRChlcago. Orla ltJ) .
Detroit
000 000 000-- o 2 o
Bo&gt;ton
on 200 10x- 5 11 o
Rut)le , Crawford (4) , Grilli
(8 ) and Freehan ; Wise {\2.10}

(10 Innings)

California 001 020 020 1&gt;- 5 12 2
Kanm Cly 000 210 002 t- 6 18 0
Hamel I, Overy (9J. Scott llOl
WP- Mingorl (4.4). LPOvery (0.21.
'
Milwaukee 200 000 000-- 2 7 0
New York 002 Olt OOx- 4 10 0
Travers 05-13) and Moore;

.(1) .

OFFICE
toSICLOSE
AT NOON ON tHURS.l- EAST COURT

all week.

Carter rode with Daley and
Sen. AdlaiE.SieveiiiOnmat
the head ol a parade tD a
CGIIventlon treltll.oo cf the
Illinois Democratic party,
where Carts' delivered bla
standard campalp ttpeach.
Many of the 1M
1111 wilD
!Ined tbe lllreell tii'OUte to .
the hall beld red llarel and
ll&amp;'chera bebiDd l.ba ail' bald
a 1arp lip proclalm1!:
''May« Dl1ey IIIII PI 1""•
Cllrta'." The Ci111J IIUc to
mar carter'l Qllcqo •
... tiM pr 11 1e11 cf a IJI'OUP
ol
antiabortion
demonalrat.ora.
'l'hey -ly dmmed oat a
speech by Cllrta' when they
took Up a chant of "Lilt, llle,
We ..." at a ...,.... cellr
rally late In tbealten-.llld
they also were pr 1 nt at one
point In the ]IIJ'Ide roule.

;

At lanta
60 80 .429 29'h
Thursday 's Results
Philadelphia 4 Chicago 2
St . Lou is 6 Montreal 1
Cinci 4 Houston J, 11 inns .
San Fran 4 Los Angeles 2
San Olego 4 Atlanta 3

(Only gomes scheduled ) ,
Today 's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)

Chicago ( R . Reuschel 11·10)
at Phi ladelphia (CI1rlstenson 11 ·

81,7 :35 p.m.
New York (Lolich 7·12 ) ar
Louis !Denny 9-6). 8:30p.m.

Sr.

Montrea t (Fry man 11· 10) at
Pittsburgh (Cllndelar la 14-5),

8:05p.m.

Cincinnati (Gullett 7·31 at San
Francisco (Knepper 0-0l. 10 :15

p.m.

Kansas City 5, and Minnesota
a few levels and you have to 6 Texas 0.
force yourself to get back on Rtlds t , Ailtros 3:
the ground."
Pinch-hitter Bob Bailey
The Phillles scored four singled In Joe Morgan with
runs in the 8ecmd Inning- the winning run lor
their biggest rally since 1\ug. Cincinnati in the lltil inning
24- with the key hits singles alter the Reds tied the score
by Dave Cash and Larry at 3-3 on a two-run single by
Bowa. The Cubs scored both Morgan In the· ninUi. Rawly
tlleir runs off Lonborg on a East wick won his lith game
single by Larry Biittner in the witil two innings of shutout
sixth inning.
relief while Ken Forsch wa4
Bill Bonham suffered his · the loser .
11th loss against ~ight Giants 4, Dodgers 2:
victories for tile Cubs.
Gary Thomasson's twoCincinnati def~ated run, seventh-inning homer
Hous\on, 4-3, In 11 innings, broke a 2-2 tie and enabled
San Francisco beat Los Jo.hn Montefusco to win hls
Angeles, 4-2, St. Louis topped 15th game against 12 losses
Montreal, 6-1, and San Diego for San Francisco. Los
edged Atlanta, 4-3, in the 1\ngeles had tied the score at
other NL games.
2-2 on Reggie Smith's horner.
In the American League, it Tommy John lost his lOth
was Oakland 2 Chicago 1, game for the Dodgers.
Cleveland 4 Baltimore 3, Cards 6, Expos 1:
Boston 5 Detroit 0, New York
Lynn McGlothen pitched a
4 Milwaukee 2, California 6 four-hitter and drove in three
runs with a pair of singles,
raising his record to 12-13 for
Lynn. Bos 123 477 69 150 .314 St. LOuis. It was the ninth
LeFlore. Det 132 535 90 t67 .312 .complete for McGiotilen 1 who
Gar r , Chi
117 456 55 Ul .309
River&gt;, NY 126 555 89111 .308
Munson, NY 133538 70 165 .307
Carty , Cle
132 479 59 lU .301
For Hospital Cheer
HOME RUNS' ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE : KinO ·
man, NY 34 ; Schmidt, Phil Jl ;
Send The Beautiful
the kind of thing that lifts you

apparent to l&gt;'wtck, suffered a
pulled liamstrlng muscle the
first day of fall practice, but
is expected to be the Rocket
signal-caller against
Mruisachusetts. · He wiU be
backed up by freshman Bob
MitcheU.
Kent State, with one of It$
youngest teams In history,
faces a stiff conference test at
central Michigan.
The Chippewas are paced
by Walt "Smoke" Hodges,
who rushed for more than
1,000 yards last season and a
5.5 yard per carry average.
He has a string of 19 con- Monday, Monday, Chi and
secu live games of over 100 Foster, Cin 29 ; Morgan , Cin 27.
AMERICAN LEAGUE c Nett .
yards rushing.
les, NY 26; L .May, Bait and
Key man In the Kent Bando( Ollk 24 : Jackson, Bait
offensive attack could be 23; Hendr ick. Clev 22.
RUNS BATTED IN·
transfer Art Best, who aveNATIONAL LEAGUE c Fos.
raged 5,9 yards per carry in ter , Cin 114 ; MOrgan . Cln 107 ;
three season at Nvtre . Wlltson, Hou 90 i Schmidt , Ph il
88 ; LU!In&gt;kl. Phil 85.
D&lt;UDe.
AMERICAN · LEAGUE : . L.
Best will team with May , Bait 95 ; Munson , NY 9J ;
Chambliss, NY 90 ; Yastrzem sophomore Andy Ferree and skl
, Bos 88; Mayberry, KC 86.
junior quarterback Mike
STOLEN BASES· .
LEAGUE c TaveWhalen, getting his first ras,NATIONAL
Pitt 53; Mofgan, Cln 52 ;.
starting assignment, In the Brock, SP.L 50; Lo~es. LA 48;
Cedeno, Hou 47 .
Golden Flash backfield.
AM e R I CAN LEAGUE :
"We've crammed a lot of North
, Oak 68 ; LeF lore, Det 56 ;
learning into a short period of Campaneris, Oak. 51; Baylor ,
KC 46.
.
time," said coach DeMis Oak 47 ; Polek,
PITCHING.' ·
Fitzgerald. "But, with so
. Most Victories
NATIONAL LEAGUE ; Jones ,
many young players, you
SO 20·12; Koosman, NY 18.8;
don't know how they will Sullon, LA 18 9; Carllon. Ph il
react under pressUre. We'll 16·6 : Ric hard, Hou .16·14.
AMERICAN LEf!,GUE : Pal·
just have to wait and see how mer
, Bait 20· 12 ; Figueroa, NY
they perform."
17·8; Tiant , Bos 17. 11 : Garland,
Ball16·6; Leonard. KC 16·7,
Et.RNED RUN AVERAGE ·
( based on US Innings pitchedl
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Sea .

struck out two and walktd
none. Don Carrithers waa the
loser for Montreal.
Padres 4, Braves 3:
Tito Fuentes singled with '
two out and tile bases filled to
drive In Doug Rader with the
winning run for San Diego In
the bottom of th.e f\lnt h
inning. Rader started the
ninth with a single and was
sacrificed to s«ond by Frc'&lt;l
Kendall. Two walks and a
forcoout preceded Fuentes'
game-winning hit which gave
reUever Butch Metzger hill
lith win against one".loss.

year on a
4 year certificate of
deposil .
l V2 Pet . per

$1,000.00

mtmmum

.deposit. interest paid
quarterly .
A sub stan t ial penally Is
Invoked on ~Il l certificate
accovn ts w ithdrawn pdor
to th e date of maturity .

SUNSHINER

Meigs Co. Branch

..@

BOUQUET

The Ath ens County
Saving!. &amp; Loan co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Oh io

59 N. Second St ,

ver, NY 2.50 ; Ra u, LA 2.55 ;
Norman . Cin .2.62 ; Jones, SO
2.11 ; Matlack. NY 2.74.

AMERICAN ·LEAGUE: · Fi ·

drych, Del 2.33; Blue, Oak 2.36 ;
Travers, Mi l 2.A6; Pa lmer , Ba~t
2.59 ; Tanana , Cal 2.63. ,
west

W.· L · Pet.

GB

Kansas City
80 59 .576
Oa Y'and
75 64 .SAO A
M ' ~sota
72 10 .507 CJih
Tt.. .... s
63 -76 .453 17
California
63 71 .450 17 11'2
Chicago
· 59 80 .424 21
Thursday 's ResultS
Oakland 2 Chicago I
Boston 5 Detro it 0
Kan City 6 Calif 5. 10 inns .
New York 4 Milwaukee 2
Mi!'lnesota 6 Texas 0
Clevel"nd 4 Balt imore 3
fl)dav 's Probai;Jte Pjtchers
( All Times EDTI
Det roit (Gl ynn 0·0) at Boston
(Cleveland 7·8) , 7 : 30p.m .
Ka nsas City (Hassler 4-9) at
M innesota (Ban e 4-7), 9 p.r:n .
M ilwaukee (Slaton 14· lll at
New York (HUnter 14-14 ). 8:05

p.m .

Oakland (Blue 14.11) at Texas

IBiyleven 11 ·tS l. 8:35p .m.

California (Rvan 12·17) at
Chicago &lt;Johnson 9·13) , 9 p.m .
Cleveland · (Waits 7·5) at
Baltimore [Grimsley 7.6) , 7: 30

p.m.

Saturday's Games
Ollkland at Texas , night
Kansas Ctty at Minnesota
cani fornla at Chic ago
Bait at Ml lw, 2, twi ,night
Detroit at New York
ClfVe at BOston , nigh t

STRIKEOUTS· · ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE; Sea -

v,r, NY 209 ; Rich ard , Hou 178 ;
Montefusco, SF 157 ; Koosman,
NY \56;
Niekro .
Carlton, Phi\ 14'9 .

All

and

AMERICAN LEAGUE ; Ryan .

Cal 260 ; 'Tanana , C:al 222 r .
Bl yleve n, Tex 180; Ecker.slev .
Clev and Hun ter, N Y 154.

Major League Results
By United Press lnternatlonil
National Leag4e ,

Chicago

Phlade l ~hl

000 002 ooo- 2 7 t
040 ooo oox- 4 6 o ·

Bonham , Garman (5 ), Cole ·
man (7) and SWISher , Mitter ·
wald (61 ; LonbOrg (15·9) ancf
Boone . LP- Bonham (8 -11).
Montreal

St. Louis

000 100

ooo- 1

$PECIAL .

UFEllME GUARANTEE MUFFLER

'500 OFF

030 020 Ofx- 6 12 1

Carrith ers, Taylor (8) and
Ca rter ; M cGlothen { 12-13) and
Simmons. LP-Carrlthers (6.
12). HR - St . Louis , Templeton

Il l.
( 11 innings)
Cincinnl 000 000 012 01- 4 13 1
Houston
120 000 000 oo- 3 7 l
Zachry, Sarmiento (S), Bor b0!1 17), Ea,wlck 19), McE ·
nan e
(1 11 and
Bench ;
Forsch
(9 )
and
Andujar ,
Herrmann . WP- Eastwlck (11 .
5) . LP- Fcrsch (4.3) .

v

.ALL OF

SEPTEMBER NO LABOR

TUNI•UP SPECIAL

4 1

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS·
Los Angeles IRau t4.t0l. 10:30 . By United Press International
San Frnclsco 100 00 1 2oo- 4 ~ 1
p.m .
.
BATTING·
Los Angeles 000 000 20Q-- 2 8 2
Houston (Dierker 13·13 and
. (based on l75 at bats)
Montefusco, Lavelle (71 and
Larson 4.6) at San Diego (Jones
NATIONAL LeAGUe.
20·12 and Sawver .t . l), 2. 9 p.m .
G. AB· R. H, Pet. Alexander : John , So sa (8) and
{7).
WPSaturday's Games
Madlock, Chi 126 451 60 153 .339 Pasley , Robles
Ci ncinna ti at San Francisco
Morgan , Cln 121416 t0514t .339 Monlefusco (15 .12). L P- John
Atlanta ( Oal ·Canton 3·5) at

TIRES &amp; BAmRIES
AT
DISCOUNT·PRICES

V-8

'28.00·

6 CYLINDER

'23.95

4 CYLINDER

'19.95

Includes Plugs, Points, Condensor,
. labor.
2.00 EXTRA

1

RESISTOR PWGS ·

We Specialize In Disc Brakes
We Tum Rolols and Drums!

New York at St . Louis
. Ol iver, Pit
109 41 6 59 138 .332 (8 -10) . HR s- San Francisco,
Montreal at PIHsbQh, niQht
Jhn q ne, Ph il 112 376 57 125 .332 Thomasson (6) ; Los Angeles ,
Atlanta at Los Ang , 2, twi .nlght G• ley, Cin tJO496 i01163 .329 Smith ( 16) .
Houston at San Dl~o , nigh t
MaddOX, Phi l 131 477 69 157 .329
Ctncago at Philadelph ia , night
Rose, Cin
141 .575 119 185 .3 22
Foster , Cin
128 505 79157 .311
Gernim o, Cln 129 436 53 135 .310
Ameri'::,}eagu~
Montnez , Atl 14 1 566 60 175 .309
w.. L.· Pet. GB Cruz , HOU 115 375 43 116 .309
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
· S5 52 .620 New York
G. AB· R. H, Pet
13 65 .529 12 112
Baltimore
71 68 .Stl 15 McRae , KC 128 449 66 l5ol .343
Cleveland
67 72 .482 19 Brett. KC 137 558 83 189 .339
Boston
63 75 .457 22'h Bostock, Min 112 411 61136 .33 1
Detroit
62 75 .453 23 Carew, Min 138 531 85 175 .330
M ilwaukee

HERE'S THE 015.

and Fl,k . LP- Ruhle (9-nl . HR

- Boston , Rice (19) .

end Humphrey : Leonard , Min ·
gorl (8 ) and Martinez, Stinson

Daley give~ C~er· the whoie thing
Carter's elecllm campaign
has received the official
bleaslng of Clicago's aUpowerful Mayor Richard J.
Daley · in a spectacular
torchlight parade that
enthused the candidate u he
aeeka more ethnic and labor
support.
T he
Demo c r a tIc
presidential nominee rode
Uirough Chicago's streelll In
an open car with Daley
Thursday night u banda
played, thou11nds ol the
party faithful cheered and
flreworb llgbted up the nlg1t

Phils end skid with 4·2 triumph

Today'•

Holtzm~n

HR~&amp;-New

(13.8} and Munson .
York, Munson 114 ),

Chambl"s (16).

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11th
· UNTIL 4 P.M •.

..FAMILY OUTING"
OF
CONSTRUCTION &amp; GENERAL LABORERS
UNION LOCAL NO. 1353

"GOOD LUCK"
To All Area

FOOTBALL TEAMS
from:

New York

~-.·-

Clothing House

HERE'S WHY IT'S ASTIHI.

I. A high voltage ignition
system and an efficient
combustion chamber
means it11 start work
when you do. Every time.
z. A "no-thumbs:' fully
automatic chain oiler
lets you concentrate on
cutting. Not oiling .

3. Hot chamber magne·
sium die·casting makes the
housing tougher. And ihe
whole saw lighter.
4. Balanced fuel and oil
tank capacities keep you
from having to refill one
when there's still plenty
in the other.

5, It's been deSigned to
last at leas! tvnce long as
as any other saw like it.
6. And by lasting twice as
long it'll really only cost
about hall as much.

as

AND HERE'S THE BEST PlACE

AROUND TO GET IT•

CHARLESTON
OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY-11 A.M. TIL 10 P.M.

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60WEST- HUNTI

(Kerm's Komer)

Your Sportsminded Store

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
Brake Service - Front End Alignment
600 E. Main St.
· · 992-2094
Pomeroy, o.

'•

�4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Friday, Sept. 10, !976

Squirrel season

Royals edge Angels
By RICK GOSSELIN
lJPISporta Writer
When George Brett was
taken to a Kansas City
hospl181 Wednesday night for
X.f'ays of a possible facial
fracture, he was treated as a
ballplayer-In particular a
Kansas
City
Royals'
ballplayer-Instead of just a
patient.
And he didn't Uke it one bit.

"E verywhere you go, "

Brett explained, "your
fri ends, yo ur next door
neighbors, people you know
... everyone is stopping you
and wanting to know when
you're going to quit
choking .... When I went to the
hospital, there were three or
four doctors and nurses and
all they said was we're going
to choke."

Social
Calendar

BAKE SALE Saturday
morning . at Kroger Store
sponsored by Modern
Woodmen Camp 7230 of
Burlingham. AU proceeds to
he donated to Pomeroy ER
Squaq ,
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
PIE SALE sponsored by
REUNION OF descendants
the
Syracuse
Ladles of ~ames c. and Ethelinda
Auxlliary. Orders will be Stone Moore Sunday at Sutton
taken until 4 p.m. Friday. United Methodist ~hurch ;
Pies offered include apple, basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.;
peach, cherry and all types of friends· are welcome.
FIFTH ANNUAL Wood
cream pies. The pies may be
picked oup S..turday a.m .. al family reunion Sunday at
the Syr,cuse municipal Forest Acres Park; basket
buUding. To order, caU 992- lunch at noon.
2015, 992-7351, 99~3 and
HOMECOMING AT Silver
992-2481.
Run Free WUI Baptist
DANCE Friday, 10 to 12 at Church, Sunday . All day
Southern Hlgh School. Music meeting with Rev. Howard
by Uncle Dugger of WXIL. Kimble and the pastor of the
Admlasion, $1.~ a person. church, Rev. Miles Trout,
~red by senior class . . speaking; pubUc invited.
MARY SHRINE, Order of
DESCENDANTS OF Dell
the White Shrine of Whaley will hold a reunion
Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m. at Sunday at the Rou~ 33
the Pomeroy Masonic roadside park, left traveling
Temple. •
south. Baske1 dinner at noon.
HAPPY HARVEsTERS AU are welcome.
Class, Trinity Church, 7:30
ANNUAL HARVEST
Friday night at the church. Festival of St. John Lutheran
Hosteaaes will be Mrs. Eva ""urch
'"'
, Pine ,.....
uouve, Sunday
Dessauer and Mrs. Ullie with church service atll am .
Hauck.
Guest speaker Rev. Jobn
SATURDAY .
Richardson. Basket luncll at
POMONA GRANGE, Rock noon, Hymn sing at 1:30pm.
Spr!~~s Grange HaU, 8 p.m. Everyone welcome.
Satw·day, Gallia County
Pomona to be guests. PoUuck
REVIVAL at the Apostolic
refreshments.
O.un:b, Racine, Sept. 9-11,
7:30pm. All day meeUng on
TAG DAY Saturday by Sunday beginning at 10 a.m.
Soutbern High School Band with John Smith and Dewey
members
·
Davis as the speakers.
RALLY DAY Sunt:tly at
Rock
Springs trnited
Methodist
O.un:b. Sunday
For M OcrasihlS
school, 9:15 p.m.; worship
service, 10 a.m . Basket
Wt Wire FIOwrs
e... ,_,..
dinner at noon. Davis Trio of
Buffalo, W. Va: will be the
featured afternoon singers.
HOMECOMING AT
Chester Church of the
Pomen~t flower Shop
Nazarene, Sunday. Afternoon .
prDgrBIII
I p.m. witb
~:lard Van Meter number ofat singers
to be
""· • ,
I'll, 992·5711
featured. .
,__./
MONDAY
WESTERN BOOT CB Oub
meeting, a p.m. Monday at
Roush's Landing, Rarine.
UNITED
Methodist
Women, Heath Church,
Middleport, 7:30 Monday
NOW OPEN
night. Vicky Houchins to bave
Gifts
devotions ; Frances
Hand Blown Glass
Brewington, program.
Imports ·
&amp;steaes, Ruth Bumgarner,
Kay Rail, Genevee OJesher
Yard Decorations
and Judy Fruer.
~caltd V. m ito belOw
MEIGS County Salon 710,
Middleport - ;,y Umits on
Eight
and Forty, 7:30 Mon·
Rt. 7
day night at the Amerlcari
Legioo ball in Racine.
RACINE ER Squad
Monday night, 8 p.m. at fire
Brighten Your Home
station . Important; all
Wiltl A Beautiful
members attend. ·

.

FLOWERS

992-2039

.

ODDS &amp; END
SHOP

DRIED
FUMER
Arrangement
FROM

'4"

Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

underway today

Brett, wllo caught Dave
Chalk's knee in the cheek
while breaking up a double
play, took a big step toward
getting the Kansas City
unfaithful off his back
Thursday night when he
lashed a· tw1&gt;0ut single to
centerfield in the lOth inning
to score Dave Nelson from
second base and give the
Royals a ·s.s victory over the
CaU!ornia Angels.
The hit, Brett's fifth of the
night, helped snap a fourgame Kansas City losing
streak and enabled the
Royals to maintain their five·
game lead over Oakland In
the American League West.
It was just the second victory
in the last II games by
Kansas City.
The winning rally started
afler California reliever Mike
Overy got Frank White to fly
out and Bob Stinson to stri!&lt;e
out to open the iMing. Nelson
singled to chase Overy and
pinch-hitter Jim Wohlford
and Brett put together
consecutive singles off
Mickey Scott to end it.
" If this game doesn't get us
going, nothing will," Brett
said.
In other games, Oakland
defeated Olicago, Z.l, Cleveland beat Baltimore, ~2, New
York downed Milwaukee, ~2,
Boston routed Detroit, :Mi,
and Minnesota blanked
Texas, 6-0.
In the Natlonal League,
Philade l phia dumped
O!icago, 4-2, st. LDuis ripped
Montreal , 6•1, San Diego
tripped
Atlanta ,
4-3,
Cincinnati edged Houstm, 43, !'nd San Francisco clipped
Los Angeles, 4-2.
A's t, White So• 1:
Rollie Fingers ended a
eighUHnning Olicago rally to
pick up his 20th save of the
season . Fingers W(l'ked out of
a bases-loaded, one-out
situatioo without giving up a
run. Oaldand scored single
nins off loser Km Brett 'in the
semnd and third innings on
RBI singles by Gene Tensce
and Don Baylor.
Yukees l, Bleweu Z:
Thurman Munson and
Chris Chambliss each
homered to give Ken
Holtzman his 13th win against
eight losses and in&lt;rease New
Yock's first-place lead In the
American League East to
12'k games. Munson's bomer,
a solo shot, gave him .a teamleading 93 RBI.

Squirrel season got
·underway today In the
Buckeye State.
The 1976 season will extend
through Nov, 13 except that
on Slate Public Hunting
Areas which runs through
Dec. 18.
Hunting houra are ooe-llalf
hour before sunrise to onehalf hour after sunset.
DaUy hag limit Is four and
possession limit after the first
day Is eight.

IDCU.S l, Oriola ! :

George , Hendrick

-b

. .T
J...a

and

Buddy BeD hit homers to pUll

n
or uay

is festive
RlJTLAND - Labor Day
weekend was a festive one at
Athena Acres, Hysell Run
Road · near
Rutland .
Hostesses Major E. Joyce
Miller and 1SG Marloo C.
frawford, liS Army (Ret.)
entertained at ·poolside and
with several' dinner and
cocktail parties.
·
Guests of honor were
Lieutenant Colonel (Ret.)
and Mrs. Edward Lane of
Petaloma , Calif., their
daughter Col. Betty J. Lane,
U. Col. SaUy L. Groome, and
u. Col. (Ret. ) Elizabeth L.
Scribner.
LTC Lane was surprised by
a special dinner at which
many toasts were offered and
gifts given in commemoration of his 80th birthday. II was also a special
celebration for his dllughler
Who · was promoted to fWI
Colmeljusl prior to arrival in
the Pcmeroy area. Col. Lane
is a panel member of the
Army Discharge Review
Board, Assistant Secretary of
the Army Manpower and
Reserve Affairs in the
Pentagon, Washington, D. C.

NFL action starts Sunday ·
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
The field won't be frozen
and
the
conference
championship won 'I be on the .
Une but you can bet when the
Pittsburgh Steelers open the
season thiJ SUnday against
the Oakland Raiders, the
same old Intensity will be
there.
It has become habit for the
Steelers and Raiders to meet
in tbe American Conference
championship and the
opening day matchup in
Oakland Is Ukely to be a
preview of the 1978 title
game.
The
Raiders
have
something to prove because
they have lost the last two
AFC championship games to
the Steelers, who went on to
wm the Super Bowl each
time. But despite the home

John Roberts

Class Ring.

Sunday from the Raiders.
"We're going Into some
hostile territory," Pittsburgh
quarttrhack Terry Bradshaw
said of the date In Oakland.
"The Raiders couldn't be a
better test for ua. We have tO
open under the most adverse
conditions Imaginable. We've
beaten them a couple of times
now In big games and I know
they'll be ready-probably
sky high."
In other games Sunday,
Baltimore Is at New England,
Denver travels to Cincinnati,
blll.
The Raiders are also Detroit visits CJI\cago, Los
missing their perennial Angeles meets Atlant.a, Minleading rusher, Marv nesota ' battles New Orleans,
Hubbard, who Is lost for the the New York Giants journey
season with a shoulder to Washington, the New York
Jets areal Cleveland, Dallas
Injury.
But emotion always play a hosts Philadelphia, St. Louis
key role In Pittsburgh- plays Seattle, San Diego
Oakland games and the visits Kansas City, San
oz.
steelers expect plenty of it Francisco clashes with Green Now I weigh
Bay and ramps Bay engages
Houston.
In the Monday night game,
Miami visits Buffalo.
Dankworlh, who played behind Joon Sciarra the last two
sea9011s, destroyed the Sun
Devil defense wilh 155 yards
Sunday
on 19 carries, while Brown
September 12th
added 127 yards and Wendell
)unday. 8-2 p.m .
. W•lkuc . 2.10 o.m.
Tyler 93. Dankworth and
Brown each scored two
MEAT
touchdowns.
ASlJ tOok a first quarter
Baked chicken, roast
beef, flounder fish,
lead m Danny Kush's 29-yard
hamburger steak, ham.
field goal, but D!lnkworth
dashed for 32-yard a!IQ oneVEGETABLES
yard touchdowns in the
Lima beans, buttered
second quarter. Brown took
corn, noodles.
over in the lhird period with
POTATOES .
m runs of two and 26 yards.
Baked, mashed, home
The l'elll8inder of the top 26
fries.
'
35 &lt;Q_cF&lt;
will see action Saturday, with
six of those clubs matched
SALAD &amp; FRUITS
against
each
other.
"That was a good game, Tossed, slaw, coHage
Highlighting the Saturday
Frankl What say we go o•er lo cheese.
schedule wlll..be No. 10
the Steamboat Inn for a bite to
Pittsburgh at No. 13 Notre
eat, and relax a bit?" ·
PIE
Dame, No. 11 CaUfornia at
Cherry and apple ..
No. 15 Georgia . and No. 18
Missouri' at No. 8 Southern
Delicious.-r.har- Broile~ sreaks
Calib'nia .
Drn-..g Room Houf$
Wjttkdats 6-J p.m., Sunday 8·2 p.m.
In other games involving
Wolkup Window
·
the top 10, No, I Nebraska Is
Weekdoys 7-10 p.m., Sunday.2-10 p.m.
at LSlJ, No. 2 Michigan hosts ·
W'ISCOOsin, No. 3 Ohio St.ale
entertains Michigan state,
No·. I Alabama visits
Millsissippi, No. 5 Texas is at
Boston College, No. 6
1
' Real Old·f asl•ioned Home Co.;ki nJ.i·
Oklahoma is at Vanderhllt
and No. 9 Penn State hosts
"' Dial 949 · 25\5
3rd St.. Racine. Ohio
Stanford.

field advant.age Sunday, the
Raiders wiU be hard pressed
to beat the Steelers because
of injuries:
Oakland will go with a
three-man defensive line
because of Injuries to
regulars Art Thoms and
Horace Jones and backup
Kevin Korver, who are aU
lost for the seuon. One of the
starters will be rookie
O.arles Philyaw, who stands
U and weighs 280 but Ia
greener than a new dollar

By DAViD HURLBERT
United Prn• IDteraatbmal
UCLA's first-year Coach
T~ Donahue beat Arizona
State's Frank Kush, but he's
not about to gloat over it.
"Their program will not
fold," Donahue said after his
Bruins soundly whipped
favored Arizona State, 28-10,
Thuraday night, dampening
the hopes of the seventhranked Sun Devils to claim
the national championship
this year. The Victory also
ended a 13-game ASU
Winning~Kush, who has worked 18
years to gain recognition for

~&amp;OYI
~J~m

"Dinner Dates" '

herita&amp;e

ao.
· Exclusln
IN IOIR IGIEI
RINGS OF QUALITY
.Mlonll-droa boll b .. rtna•

for 1ipltt,pump

.t !liU!~ipcn1iloa

••

•

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or Family-Size 10 LB. capacity washers an

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wl8hlng ond drying todoly'o oveNgo family loed. Big fomily,
model KDP2450A•

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Middlel*l, 0.
(

WEEKEND •••
THEN SOME I

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Pomeroy, o.
Tbe llore wllli"AD KIDdl Of Shlfr'
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•ver1111o family, omall fomlly,, Norge hao the right moc1o1 for
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INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Falcon squad
steadied by
16lettermen
MASON, W. Va. - Sixteen
returning lettermen, under
usual circumstances, would
but. guarantee a better
than average foothaU seascn
lor most high school teams .
But winning tsn 'I going to ~
that easy, according to
· Wahama High Sch.ool's head
coach, Marcus Rice.
The Glenville State College
graduate, beginning his third
year at Wahama, muat fill
several key positions both on
offense and . on defense
despite an abundance of
experienced personnel. Six
starters finished their · high
si:hool careers In 1975's 5-4-1
squad. Marty Holbrook and
Scott Kebler left vacancies in
the White Falcon backfield
while Terry Tucker, Joe
Shepard, Rick Dye and Brian
f\~ll all exited from the
line.
: To further complicate
matiers, one of the leading
jcorers and pass catchers
[rom a year ago, Scott Roush,
has transferred to Point
l&gt;le881111t where he hopes to
lnake his mark on the
Jrldlron. ·

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senior co-captain Stan
Starcher at middle guard. He
weighs in at 198. Arnold and
Wilford will be at the

CO-CAPTAINS FOR FALCON SQUAD - Two seniors, Tim Sayre, on the left, and Mike
Goldsberry, on the right, were named as captains for the 1976 Wahama High School football
team. In the center Is head coach, Marcus RiCE.

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CO-&lt;:API'AINS - Marauder co-eaptains this year are
Stan Starcher, left, and Allen Stewart, both seniors.

defensive tackles while 5'10"
Wheeler Thomas
and
Granda] lead the defense at
ends.

Wayne Cotterill, Duane Weber, ADen Stewart, Ray
WiUford, Dave Miller, Stan Starcher, Dan Granda!, and
Ron Goates.

In the defensive backfield
will be seniors Rick George, a
150 lb . letterman , and
Thomas at · cornerback .

If the young and lnezKenny Young will be sharing
perlenced
~auders hold up
duties at the right half
well
ilnder
this early season
position. Both are juniors.
pressure,
then
local fans can
Senior Steve Randolph and Stewart and 170 lb. junior
•look
forward
to a good
Coates will be battling for left Brent Stanley will be at the
halfback duties while 6-foot inside linebacker spots to season. See you at Point
Pleasant.
plug up any holes.
1~ lb. Greg Witte and 5'11"

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George Gum, aluiough he's
one of the non-lettermen, will
be caUlng the signals. and at
6'1" and !55lbs. should prove
scUd at that position , The
other two non-lettermen wUI
be senior wingback Tim
Thomas, standing at 5'11"
and 165, and junior tackle
Brent Arnold at 6'1" and 181
pounds.
Lettermen are seniors Dan
Buffington and Ron Coates
at fullback and tailback,
respectively, to round out the
hackfield .. Buffington weighs
Is at 168 while Coates is 160.
Others on the line will be
Dan Granda!, a 6-loot, 168 lb.
tight end and co-eapt. ADen
Stewart at slot end . Ray ·
Wilford at 195 lbs . teams up
with Ar~old at tackle , and
senior letterman Rick
Johnsen at 138 lbs. will be
hikjng the ball. Opening up
holes at the guard posts will
be 170 lb. Duane Weber and
160 lb. Dave Miller , both
seniors, and lettermen .
Trying to stop the Big
Blacks rushing game will be

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QUASAR

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E•lr Ameficon St~ing. 100!&lt;. Solid

Meigs Marauder Football Squad for 1976

The three drivers increased

the field to U willie one more
driver 'WIIS expected to be
annOUIICf!d next week.
Previously announced · · ·
drivers included defending
champion A.J . Foyt, AI
Unser, Jlitmy Rutherford,
Richard
Petty,
Cale
Yarborough, David Pearson,
James Hunt and Jody
Scheckter.

ncen

AND

The Meigs County gridseascn gets underway tonight
with all three high schools
taking the field . Out Meigs
High School way, Coach
Charles Chancey's
Marauders are enthused
about, getting to play Friday
at Point Pleasant . Earlier
this . week, Chancey's boys
feared they might not get tO
. make the trip due to the
teacher strike, but the game
will go on.
'
Chancey says his boys'
good attitude Is a big plus, but
the early games will mean a
lot due to the fac.t that many.
of the players lack experience. Scouting reports
show Point Pleasant is quick
and aggressive, but the two
· local clubs seem to be evenly
matched size-wise.
·Point has one advantage , .
that being the fact they've
already played one game, a
15-13 overtime loss to always
powerful Barboursville.
The Marauders' offensive
Une-up should prove to be
· sefid with eight lettermen
leading the char~e. JUnior

CSteamboat In11

ORSE CHOW CHECKER

Ouuar Wort.sln a Orawo,..

New stars, new
heroes, new
names are here
another season

98-lb. 2

UCLA rips Sun Devils

the Sun Devils, was
th(rOIIghly disgusted after
the nationally televised
coo test.
"We had no offense at all,"
be said. ''They &lt;.Wipletely
intimidated us."
He was not any more
satisfied with tbe defense,
which Jet the !4lb.f'anked
Bruins ramble .for 509
yards.
"lt was the worst exhlbitim
l.OS.ANGELES (UPI)- AI of defense I have ever seen at
Holbert, Buddy Baker and Arizona State," Kush said.
The Bruins, with senior
Gordm Jdlncock were added
Thursday to ' the U&lt;iriftr quarterback Jeff Dankworth
field oompeting in identical and halfback Theotis Brown
&lt;llevrolet Camaros in tbe leading tbe Veer option,
four-race , $200 , 000 rushed for 486 yards, but had
International Race of mly 23 yards 1"'..;'11·
O!ampions.

Cleveland within 2'4 games
of secmd-place Baltimore in
tbe American League ·East. It
was the fourth straight
victa'y over the Orioles by
Pa1 oobEbn, who increased
his recml to 1~11.
Ral Solt 5,
1:
Rick W'!lle hurled 6 1-3
For Back-To-School
innings of perfect ball and
seUJed f&lt;r a two-bitter in
leading Boston to their lOth
vicllry in 13 meetings with
the Tigers. Jim Rice hit his
19th hooter of tbe seuon for
the Red Sox.
Twbd I, Raalen 1:
Rod Carew bit his !bird
. ch.fiit grand slam of
pill
. tbe
rear to back the lhree«t
plldling of DaV. Goltz in
giving Minnellota ita 6flh
..C:::~ +u. on Fri.
straight win . Goltz, U-13, did .
till on S.t.
not allow a runner past
PLANNED
house
second, walked one and
Plans for entertaining the struck out eight.
MiddlapOrt, 0.
women of. Tbea Court,
Collllllbua Oil Sept. 23 ,rere
made at a recent meeung of
the Twin City Sbrlnettes at
the home of Mrs. Jean Moore.
The dinner wiD be au pm. at ·
the Melp Inn. ReavaUona
are to be made with Mrs.
Cora Beegle by Sept. 17. The
price Is 16.~ in advance.
ONE 50 LB. BAG DF PURINA
Membership duea are also
payable to Mrs. BeecJe.

DINNER

I was a 98-lb. weaUing
until I got my

Middleport, 0.
i

In add! lion lo his pass
re ceiving skills, Roush
also did the placekicking. His
• presence will be greatly
m(ssed by' the 1976 Falcon
team.
With the departure of seven
starleTs the hopes of the
White Falcon fooihall team
will be riding on the passing
combination of veteran
quarterback Mike Golds- .
be_rry and Tim Sayre. The
dynamic duo teamed up to
become one of the most
feared threats in the State of
West Virginia in 1975.
Goldsberry , passed for 14
touchdowns wi!~ Sayre
nabbing the majority.
Heading up the Ust of
linemen candidates are
senior guard Tim Tucker who
returns to hls.guard position.
Teddy Swartz and Buddy
Rose, both juniors, also
figure to land starling harths
in the.lnterior line.
The offensive backfield has
Jttree vacant positions and a
whole host of appUcants are
fighting for the number one
jobs.
Senio~s Tim Thompson and

Jim Oliver, juniors Brett
Holbrook, Dwayne White ,
Gregg Blessing and Kurtis
Sayre 'are in the running for
the open slots. Sophomore
Kevin Roush, last season 's
freshman star, also has an
excellent shot at gelling a

FALCON SENIORS- The Wahama White Falcon football team will
lose 15 men after this year to graduation. Pictured in the first row, left to
right, Kurt Sayre, Tim Tucker, Rick Stafford, Mike Goldsberry, Buddy

starting nod.
The defensive eleven,
termed the pride of Wahama
in recent years, will be led by
linebacker Brett Holbrook
and lineman DeWayne White.
Holbrook returns as one of
the premiere defensive men

in the area at his linebacker
position . White also showed
signs of superiority in 1975
and figures to improve even
more this year.
The Bend area squad has
added one and lost a squad
member since the beginning

Rose, Tim Sayre and Rod Van Fosson . Second row, Jim Oliver, Dwayne
White, Kelvin Honaker, Greg Blessing, Danny Weese, Phil Hobbs, Mike
King and Brett Holbrook.

of drills some three weeks junior Tim Rawlings who is a
ago. Gone is senior Tom transfer student. Rawlings Is
Foreman who suffered a currently wor king at the
broken arm during practice. spti~nd position and figures
The 6 foot , 186 pound tackle to help the·White Falcons out.
will be out of action for 6 to 8
Wahama went on the road
weeks . The addition to the for their· September 3rd
roster is 5'10", 154 pound

- ---- -·

The 1976 Wahama White Falcons
,,

.,

opener againstScott Jarnll 's
Wayne Pioneers. Wayne shut
out the Falcons 12-0. Thla
Friday Wahama takes on
Hannan at Bachtel Field
starting at 7:30p.m.
"

--

�4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Friday, Sept. 10, !976

Squirrel season

Royals edge Angels
By RICK GOSSELIN
lJPISporta Writer
When George Brett was
taken to a Kansas City
hospl181 Wednesday night for
X.f'ays of a possible facial
fracture, he was treated as a
ballplayer-In particular a
Kansas
City
Royals'
ballplayer-Instead of just a
patient.
And he didn't Uke it one bit.

"E verywhere you go, "

Brett explained, "your
fri ends, yo ur next door
neighbors, people you know
... everyone is stopping you
and wanting to know when
you're going to quit
choking .... When I went to the
hospital, there were three or
four doctors and nurses and
all they said was we're going
to choke."

Social
Calendar

BAKE SALE Saturday
morning . at Kroger Store
sponsored by Modern
Woodmen Camp 7230 of
Burlingham. AU proceeds to
he donated to Pomeroy ER
Squaq ,
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
PIE SALE sponsored by
REUNION OF descendants
the
Syracuse
Ladles of ~ames c. and Ethelinda
Auxlliary. Orders will be Stone Moore Sunday at Sutton
taken until 4 p.m. Friday. United Methodist ~hurch ;
Pies offered include apple, basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.;
peach, cherry and all types of friends· are welcome.
FIFTH ANNUAL Wood
cream pies. The pies may be
picked oup S..turday a.m .. al family reunion Sunday at
the Syr,cuse municipal Forest Acres Park; basket
buUding. To order, caU 992- lunch at noon.
2015, 992-7351, 99~3 and
HOMECOMING AT Silver
992-2481.
Run Free WUI Baptist
DANCE Friday, 10 to 12 at Church, Sunday . All day
Southern Hlgh School. Music meeting with Rev. Howard
by Uncle Dugger of WXIL. Kimble and the pastor of the
Admlasion, $1.~ a person. church, Rev. Miles Trout,
~red by senior class . . speaking; pubUc invited.
MARY SHRINE, Order of
DESCENDANTS OF Dell
the White Shrine of Whaley will hold a reunion
Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m. at Sunday at the Rou~ 33
the Pomeroy Masonic roadside park, left traveling
Temple. •
south. Baske1 dinner at noon.
HAPPY HARVEsTERS AU are welcome.
Class, Trinity Church, 7:30
ANNUAL HARVEST
Friday night at the church. Festival of St. John Lutheran
Hosteaaes will be Mrs. Eva ""urch
'"'
, Pine ,.....
uouve, Sunday
Dessauer and Mrs. Ullie with church service atll am .
Hauck.
Guest speaker Rev. Jobn
SATURDAY .
Richardson. Basket luncll at
POMONA GRANGE, Rock noon, Hymn sing at 1:30pm.
Spr!~~s Grange HaU, 8 p.m. Everyone welcome.
Satw·day, Gallia County
Pomona to be guests. PoUuck
REVIVAL at the Apostolic
refreshments.
O.un:b, Racine, Sept. 9-11,
7:30pm. All day meeUng on
TAG DAY Saturday by Sunday beginning at 10 a.m.
Soutbern High School Band with John Smith and Dewey
members
·
Davis as the speakers.
RALLY DAY Sunt:tly at
Rock
Springs trnited
Methodist
O.un:b. Sunday
For M OcrasihlS
school, 9:15 p.m.; worship
service, 10 a.m . Basket
Wt Wire FIOwrs
e... ,_,..
dinner at noon. Davis Trio of
Buffalo, W. Va: will be the
featured afternoon singers.
HOMECOMING AT
Chester Church of the
Pomen~t flower Shop
Nazarene, Sunday. Afternoon .
prDgrBIII
I p.m. witb
~:lard Van Meter number ofat singers
to be
""· • ,
I'll, 992·5711
featured. .
,__./
MONDAY
WESTERN BOOT CB Oub
meeting, a p.m. Monday at
Roush's Landing, Rarine.
UNITED
Methodist
Women, Heath Church,
Middleport, 7:30 Monday
NOW OPEN
night. Vicky Houchins to bave
Gifts
devotions ; Frances
Hand Blown Glass
Brewington, program.
Imports ·
&amp;steaes, Ruth Bumgarner,
Kay Rail, Genevee OJesher
Yard Decorations
and Judy Fruer.
~caltd V. m ito belOw
MEIGS County Salon 710,
Middleport - ;,y Umits on
Eight
and Forty, 7:30 Mon·
Rt. 7
day night at the Amerlcari
Legioo ball in Racine.
RACINE ER Squad
Monday night, 8 p.m. at fire
Brighten Your Home
station . Important; all
Wiltl A Beautiful
members attend. ·

.

FLOWERS

992-2039

.

ODDS &amp; END
SHOP

DRIED
FUMER
Arrangement
FROM

'4"

Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

underway today

Brett, wllo caught Dave
Chalk's knee in the cheek
while breaking up a double
play, took a big step toward
getting the Kansas City
unfaithful off his back
Thursday night when he
lashed a· tw1&gt;0ut single to
centerfield in the lOth inning
to score Dave Nelson from
second base and give the
Royals a ·s.s victory over the
CaU!ornia Angels.
The hit, Brett's fifth of the
night, helped snap a fourgame Kansas City losing
streak and enabled the
Royals to maintain their five·
game lead over Oakland In
the American League West.
It was just the second victory
in the last II games by
Kansas City.
The winning rally started
afler California reliever Mike
Overy got Frank White to fly
out and Bob Stinson to stri!&lt;e
out to open the iMing. Nelson
singled to chase Overy and
pinch-hitter Jim Wohlford
and Brett put together
consecutive singles off
Mickey Scott to end it.
" If this game doesn't get us
going, nothing will," Brett
said.
In other games, Oakland
defeated Olicago, Z.l, Cleveland beat Baltimore, ~2, New
York downed Milwaukee, ~2,
Boston routed Detroit, :Mi,
and Minnesota blanked
Texas, 6-0.
In the Natlonal League,
Philade l phia dumped
O!icago, 4-2, st. LDuis ripped
Montreal , 6•1, San Diego
tripped
Atlanta ,
4-3,
Cincinnati edged Houstm, 43, !'nd San Francisco clipped
Los Angeles, 4-2.
A's t, White So• 1:
Rollie Fingers ended a
eighUHnning Olicago rally to
pick up his 20th save of the
season . Fingers W(l'ked out of
a bases-loaded, one-out
situatioo without giving up a
run. Oaldand scored single
nins off loser Km Brett 'in the
semnd and third innings on
RBI singles by Gene Tensce
and Don Baylor.
Yukees l, Bleweu Z:
Thurman Munson and
Chris Chambliss each
homered to give Ken
Holtzman his 13th win against
eight losses and in&lt;rease New
Yock's first-place lead In the
American League East to
12'k games. Munson's bomer,
a solo shot, gave him .a teamleading 93 RBI.

Squirrel season got
·underway today In the
Buckeye State.
The 1976 season will extend
through Nov, 13 except that
on Slate Public Hunting
Areas which runs through
Dec. 18.
Hunting houra are ooe-llalf
hour before sunrise to onehalf hour after sunset.
DaUy hag limit Is four and
possession limit after the first
day Is eight.

IDCU.S l, Oriola ! :

George , Hendrick

-b

. .T
J...a

and

Buddy BeD hit homers to pUll

n
or uay

is festive
RlJTLAND - Labor Day
weekend was a festive one at
Athena Acres, Hysell Run
Road · near
Rutland .
Hostesses Major E. Joyce
Miller and 1SG Marloo C.
frawford, liS Army (Ret.)
entertained at ·poolside and
with several' dinner and
cocktail parties.
·
Guests of honor were
Lieutenant Colonel (Ret.)
and Mrs. Edward Lane of
Petaloma , Calif., their
daughter Col. Betty J. Lane,
U. Col. SaUy L. Groome, and
u. Col. (Ret. ) Elizabeth L.
Scribner.
LTC Lane was surprised by
a special dinner at which
many toasts were offered and
gifts given in commemoration of his 80th birthday. II was also a special
celebration for his dllughler
Who · was promoted to fWI
Colmeljusl prior to arrival in
the Pcmeroy area. Col. Lane
is a panel member of the
Army Discharge Review
Board, Assistant Secretary of
the Army Manpower and
Reserve Affairs in the
Pentagon, Washington, D. C.

NFL action starts Sunday ·
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
The field won't be frozen
and
the
conference
championship won 'I be on the .
Une but you can bet when the
Pittsburgh Steelers open the
season thiJ SUnday against
the Oakland Raiders, the
same old Intensity will be
there.
It has become habit for the
Steelers and Raiders to meet
in tbe American Conference
championship and the
opening day matchup in
Oakland Is Ukely to be a
preview of the 1978 title
game.
The
Raiders
have
something to prove because
they have lost the last two
AFC championship games to
the Steelers, who went on to
wm the Super Bowl each
time. But despite the home

John Roberts

Class Ring.

Sunday from the Raiders.
"We're going Into some
hostile territory," Pittsburgh
quarttrhack Terry Bradshaw
said of the date In Oakland.
"The Raiders couldn't be a
better test for ua. We have tO
open under the most adverse
conditions Imaginable. We've
beaten them a couple of times
now In big games and I know
they'll be ready-probably
sky high."
In other games Sunday,
Baltimore Is at New England,
Denver travels to Cincinnati,
blll.
The Raiders are also Detroit visits CJI\cago, Los
missing their perennial Angeles meets Atlant.a, Minleading rusher, Marv nesota ' battles New Orleans,
Hubbard, who Is lost for the the New York Giants journey
season with a shoulder to Washington, the New York
Jets areal Cleveland, Dallas
Injury.
But emotion always play a hosts Philadelphia, St. Louis
key role In Pittsburgh- plays Seattle, San Diego
Oakland games and the visits Kansas City, San
oz.
steelers expect plenty of it Francisco clashes with Green Now I weigh
Bay and ramps Bay engages
Houston.
In the Monday night game,
Miami visits Buffalo.
Dankworlh, who played behind Joon Sciarra the last two
sea9011s, destroyed the Sun
Devil defense wilh 155 yards
Sunday
on 19 carries, while Brown
September 12th
added 127 yards and Wendell
)unday. 8-2 p.m .
. W•lkuc . 2.10 o.m.
Tyler 93. Dankworth and
Brown each scored two
MEAT
touchdowns.
ASlJ tOok a first quarter
Baked chicken, roast
beef, flounder fish,
lead m Danny Kush's 29-yard
hamburger steak, ham.
field goal, but D!lnkworth
dashed for 32-yard a!IQ oneVEGETABLES
yard touchdowns in the
Lima beans, buttered
second quarter. Brown took
corn, noodles.
over in the lhird period with
POTATOES .
m runs of two and 26 yards.
Baked, mashed, home
The l'elll8inder of the top 26
fries.
'
35 &lt;Q_cF&lt;
will see action Saturday, with
six of those clubs matched
SALAD &amp; FRUITS
against
each
other.
"That was a good game, Tossed, slaw, coHage
Highlighting the Saturday
Frankl What say we go o•er lo cheese.
schedule wlll..be No. 10
the Steamboat Inn for a bite to
Pittsburgh at No. 13 Notre
eat, and relax a bit?" ·
PIE
Dame, No. 11 CaUfornia at
Cherry and apple ..
No. 15 Georgia . and No. 18
Missouri' at No. 8 Southern
Delicious.-r.har- Broile~ sreaks
Calib'nia .
Drn-..g Room Houf$
Wjttkdats 6-J p.m., Sunday 8·2 p.m.
In other games involving
Wolkup Window
·
the top 10, No, I Nebraska Is
Weekdoys 7-10 p.m., Sunday.2-10 p.m.
at LSlJ, No. 2 Michigan hosts ·
W'ISCOOsin, No. 3 Ohio St.ale
entertains Michigan state,
No·. I Alabama visits
Millsissippi, No. 5 Texas is at
Boston College, No. 6
1
' Real Old·f asl•ioned Home Co.;ki nJ.i·
Oklahoma is at Vanderhllt
and No. 9 Penn State hosts
"' Dial 949 · 25\5
3rd St.. Racine. Ohio
Stanford.

field advant.age Sunday, the
Raiders wiU be hard pressed
to beat the Steelers because
of injuries:
Oakland will go with a
three-man defensive line
because of Injuries to
regulars Art Thoms and
Horace Jones and backup
Kevin Korver, who are aU
lost for the seuon. One of the
starters will be rookie
O.arles Philyaw, who stands
U and weighs 280 but Ia
greener than a new dollar

By DAViD HURLBERT
United Prn• IDteraatbmal
UCLA's first-year Coach
T~ Donahue beat Arizona
State's Frank Kush, but he's
not about to gloat over it.
"Their program will not
fold," Donahue said after his
Bruins soundly whipped
favored Arizona State, 28-10,
Thuraday night, dampening
the hopes of the seventhranked Sun Devils to claim
the national championship
this year. The Victory also
ended a 13-game ASU
Winning~Kush, who has worked 18
years to gain recognition for

~&amp;OYI
~J~m

"Dinner Dates" '

herita&amp;e

ao.
· Exclusln
IN IOIR IGIEI
RINGS OF QUALITY
.Mlonll-droa boll b .. rtna•

for 1ipltt,pump

.t !liU!~ipcn1iloa

••

•

INIOIRIGIEI
or Family-Size 10 LB. capacity washers an

$49goo

a pair.

wl8hlng ond drying todoly'o oveNgo family loed. Big fomily,
model KDP2450A•

(Complete-no hay need•dl)

... IS ENOUGH FDA A

LD•O•D•NG

Middlel*l, 0.
(

WEEKEND •••
THEN SOME I

. get it at

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Mala St.
Pomeroy, o.
Tbe llore wllli"AD KIDdl Of Shlfr'
for pell-llllb._ - lat'Je lllll1maU
IDlmala - Ia- -· pf. .l.

•ver1111o family, omall fomlly,, Norge hao the right moc1o1 for
you.

Top-rated
Norge dishwasher ••• portables, convertibles, built-in's
'Top recod over I -

bronct. te.cod by • will kn-n in- 88
d ; ,,._,\ -ing agoncy ond publl........ top rliCid dioh- 1ow
88
Weohint , •• offoct:iwl drylnt .•• biggoec ..,...lty of oil '

'19 gs~

inatelled

bo ..Miohltld.

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Falcon squad
steadied by
16lettermen
MASON, W. Va. - Sixteen
returning lettermen, under
usual circumstances, would
but. guarantee a better
than average foothaU seascn
lor most high school teams .
But winning tsn 'I going to ~
that easy, according to
· Wahama High Sch.ool's head
coach, Marcus Rice.
The Glenville State College
graduate, beginning his third
year at Wahama, muat fill
several key positions both on
offense and . on defense
despite an abundance of
experienced personnel. Six
starters finished their · high
si:hool careers In 1975's 5-4-1
squad. Marty Holbrook and
Scott Kebler left vacancies in
the White Falcon backfield
while Terry Tucker, Joe
Shepard, Rick Dye and Brian
f\~ll all exited from the
line.
: To further complicate
matiers, one of the leading
jcorers and pass catchers
[rom a year ago, Scott Roush,
has transferred to Point
l&gt;le881111t where he hopes to
lnake his mark on the
Jrldlron. ·

an

lnd d..,..., blftol' ClpHity honHo wooh"" and dry"" modo,
or new Norge 10 lb. capacity model IPICiflcally dnignod filr

WERNER RADIO &amp;T.V.

senior co-captain Stan
Starcher at middle guard. He
weighs in at 198. Arnold and
Wilford will be at the

CO-CAPTAINS FOR FALCON SQUAD - Two seniors, Tim Sayre, on the left, and Mike
Goldsberry, on the right, were named as captains for the 1976 Wahama High School football
team. In the center Is head coach, Marcus RiCE.

choose from Heavy-Duty 20 lb. capacity

IIWllt

SENIOR MARAUDERS - Front, 1-r, Rick George,
Thomas Wheeler, Steve Randolph, Tim Thomas, Rick
Johnson, Randy George , Danny Buffington; second row,

0

Toke your p!ck from oxclullive Norge 20 lb. Cllp8City wo-.

Modtl WUI01fi.S.

CO-&lt;:API'AINS - Marauder co-eaptains this year are
Stan Starcher, left, and Allen Stewart, both seniors.

defensive tackles while 5'10"
Wheeler Thomas
and
Granda] lead the defense at
ends.

Wayne Cotterill, Duane Weber, ADen Stewart, Ray
WiUford, Dave Miller, Stan Starcher, Dan Granda!, and
Ron Goates.

In the defensive backfield
will be seniors Rick George, a
150 lb . letterman , and
Thomas at · cornerback .

If the young and lnezKenny Young will be sharing
perlenced
~auders hold up
duties at the right half
well
ilnder
this early season
position. Both are juniors.
pressure,
then
local fans can
Senior Steve Randolph and Stewart and 170 lb. junior
•look
forward
to a good
Coates will be battling for left Brent Stanley will be at the
halfback duties while 6-foot inside linebacker spots to season. See you at Point
Pleasant.
plug up any holes.
1~ lb. Greg Witte and 5'11"

SALE

dryers ••• as low as

Sllte Chassit. lnsta-Matic· Color
Tuning. PushbuNon UHFTuflng.
Lighted Channel NlKTlbers.

George Gum, aluiough he's
one of the non-lettermen, will
be caUlng the signals. and at
6'1" and !55lbs. should prove
scUd at that position , The
other two non-lettermen wUI
be senior wingback Tim
Thomas, standing at 5'11"
and 165, and junior tackle
Brent Arnold at 6'1" and 181
pounds.
Lettermen are seniors Dan
Buffington and Ron Coates
at fullback and tailback,
respectively, to round out the
hackfield .. Buffington weighs
Is at 168 while Coates is 160.
Others on the line will be
Dan Granda!, a 6-loot, 168 lb.
tight end and co-eapt. ADen
Stewart at slot end . Ray ·
Wilford at 195 lbs . teams up
with Ar~old at tackle , and
senior letterman Rick
Johnsen at 138 lbs. will be
hikjng the ball. Opening up
holes at the guard posts will
be 170 lb. Duane Weber and
160 lb. Dave Miller , both
seniors, and lettermen .
Trying to stop the Big
Blacks rushing game will be

GIANT

QUASAR

Color TV
E•lr Ameficon St~ing. 100!&lt;. Solid

Meigs Marauder Football Squad for 1976

The three drivers increased

the field to U willie one more
driver 'WIIS expected to be
annOUIICf!d next week.
Previously announced · · ·
drivers included defending
champion A.J . Foyt, AI
Unser, Jlitmy Rutherford,
Richard
Petty,
Cale
Yarborough, David Pearson,
James Hunt and Jody
Scheckter.

ncen

AND

The Meigs County gridseascn gets underway tonight
with all three high schools
taking the field . Out Meigs
High School way, Coach
Charles Chancey's
Marauders are enthused
about, getting to play Friday
at Point Pleasant . Earlier
this . week, Chancey's boys
feared they might not get tO
. make the trip due to the
teacher strike, but the game
will go on.
'
Chancey says his boys'
good attitude Is a big plus, but
the early games will mean a
lot due to the fac.t that many.
of the players lack experience. Scouting reports
show Point Pleasant is quick
and aggressive, but the two
· local clubs seem to be evenly
matched size-wise.
·Point has one advantage , .
that being the fact they've
already played one game, a
15-13 overtime loss to always
powerful Barboursville.
The Marauders' offensive
Une-up should prove to be
· sefid with eight lettermen
leading the char~e. JUnior

CSteamboat In11

ORSE CHOW CHECKER

Ouuar Wort.sln a Orawo,..

New stars, new
heroes, new
names are here
another season

98-lb. 2

UCLA rips Sun Devils

the Sun Devils, was
th(rOIIghly disgusted after
the nationally televised
coo test.
"We had no offense at all,"
be said. ''They &lt;.Wipletely
intimidated us."
He was not any more
satisfied with tbe defense,
which Jet the !4lb.f'anked
Bruins ramble .for 509
yards.
"lt was the worst exhlbitim
l.OS.ANGELES (UPI)- AI of defense I have ever seen at
Holbert, Buddy Baker and Arizona State," Kush said.
The Bruins, with senior
Gordm Jdlncock were added
Thursday to ' the U&lt;iriftr quarterback Jeff Dankworth
field oompeting in identical and halfback Theotis Brown
&lt;llevrolet Camaros in tbe leading tbe Veer option,
four-race , $200 , 000 rushed for 486 yards, but had
International Race of mly 23 yards 1"'..;'11·
O!ampions.

Cleveland within 2'4 games
of secmd-place Baltimore in
tbe American League ·East. It
was the fourth straight
victa'y over the Orioles by
Pa1 oobEbn, who increased
his recml to 1~11.
Ral Solt 5,
1:
Rick W'!lle hurled 6 1-3
For Back-To-School
innings of perfect ball and
seUJed f&lt;r a two-bitter in
leading Boston to their lOth
vicllry in 13 meetings with
the Tigers. Jim Rice hit his
19th hooter of tbe seuon for
the Red Sox.
Twbd I, Raalen 1:
Rod Carew bit his !bird
. ch.fiit grand slam of
pill
. tbe
rear to back the lhree«t
plldling of DaV. Goltz in
giving Minnellota ita 6flh
..C:::~ +u. on Fri.
straight win . Goltz, U-13, did .
till on S.t.
not allow a runner past
PLANNED
house
second, walked one and
Plans for entertaining the struck out eight.
MiddlapOrt, 0.
women of. Tbea Court,
Collllllbua Oil Sept. 23 ,rere
made at a recent meeung of
the Twin City Sbrlnettes at
the home of Mrs. Jean Moore.
The dinner wiD be au pm. at ·
the Melp Inn. ReavaUona
are to be made with Mrs.
Cora Beegle by Sept. 17. The
price Is 16.~ in advance.
ONE 50 LB. BAG DF PURINA
Membership duea are also
payable to Mrs. BeecJe.

DINNER

I was a 98-lb. weaUing
until I got my

Middleport, 0.
i

In add! lion lo his pass
re ceiving skills, Roush
also did the placekicking. His
• presence will be greatly
m(ssed by' the 1976 Falcon
team.
With the departure of seven
starleTs the hopes of the
White Falcon fooihall team
will be riding on the passing
combination of veteran
quarterback Mike Golds- .
be_rry and Tim Sayre. The
dynamic duo teamed up to
become one of the most
feared threats in the State of
West Virginia in 1975.
Goldsberry , passed for 14
touchdowns wi!~ Sayre
nabbing the majority.
Heading up the Ust of
linemen candidates are
senior guard Tim Tucker who
returns to hls.guard position.
Teddy Swartz and Buddy
Rose, both juniors, also
figure to land starling harths
in the.lnterior line.
The offensive backfield has
Jttree vacant positions and a
whole host of appUcants are
fighting for the number one
jobs.
Senio~s Tim Thompson and

Jim Oliver, juniors Brett
Holbrook, Dwayne White ,
Gregg Blessing and Kurtis
Sayre 'are in the running for
the open slots. Sophomore
Kevin Roush, last season 's
freshman star, also has an
excellent shot at gelling a

FALCON SENIORS- The Wahama White Falcon football team will
lose 15 men after this year to graduation. Pictured in the first row, left to
right, Kurt Sayre, Tim Tucker, Rick Stafford, Mike Goldsberry, Buddy

starting nod.
The defensive eleven,
termed the pride of Wahama
in recent years, will be led by
linebacker Brett Holbrook
and lineman DeWayne White.
Holbrook returns as one of
the premiere defensive men

in the area at his linebacker
position . White also showed
signs of superiority in 1975
and figures to improve even
more this year.
The Bend area squad has
added one and lost a squad
member since the beginning

Rose, Tim Sayre and Rod Van Fosson . Second row, Jim Oliver, Dwayne
White, Kelvin Honaker, Greg Blessing, Danny Weese, Phil Hobbs, Mike
King and Brett Holbrook.

of drills some three weeks junior Tim Rawlings who is a
ago. Gone is senior Tom transfer student. Rawlings Is
Foreman who suffered a currently wor king at the
broken arm during practice. spti~nd position and figures
The 6 foot , 186 pound tackle to help the·White Falcons out.
will be out of action for 6 to 8
Wahama went on the road
weeks . The addition to the for their· September 3rd
roster is 5'10", 154 pound

- ---- -·

The 1976 Wahama White Falcons
,,

.,

opener againstScott Jarnll 's
Wayne Pioneers. Wayne shut
out the Falcons 12-0. Thla
Friday Wahama takes on
Hannan at Bachtel Field
starting at 7:30p.m.
"

--

�1
1- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlepori-P!IIIleroy, 0., Friday, Sept.I0,!976

Htre'slhtpl.. You
Klclc Oft A Great Year!

1976

~~)

/

/
/

It's the crack of pads mingled with the roar af home team
crowd as the goal line is crossed for the winning score.
It's a chorus of cheerleaders leading a mob of fans who sit on
cold benches·warmed by blankets, hot chocolate or whatever fits in
a hip pocket flask . It's legend - like the Gripper or the Four
Horsemen. It's rivalry - like Ohio State vs . Michigan.
To the players, it's a culmination of weeks of grass drills,
scrimmages and just plain sweat- and it's worth very bit of the
·
'
effort.
Altogether, it adds up to a game Americans go a little craz;y
over every fa II - footba II.
.·
.
.
·
. The local merchants who sponsor this page wish the best of
luck to the area teams, who, through their outstanding efforts,
bring the joy of gridiron madness to Meigs County.

e
1

/

._...
WHITE FALCON SCHEDULE
A

Sept. 3- Wayne
Sept. 10- Hannan
Sept. 17- Fed. Hocking

Sept. 10- Federal Hocking

H
H

Sept. 24-Duval

Sept, 17- Hannan Trace

"

O~t.

1- Raclne
Oct. 1- M IIton
Oct. 15-"Calhoun
Oct.22- WInfield
Oct. 29- 0PEN
Nov. 5- luffalo (P)
Nov. 12-Siatenvllle

H
A .
-

A
A
H
H

A Hom e /l11nk ·
Fur

EASTERN EAGLES

SOUTHERN TORNADOS

'

Sept. 24-Waterford

H

Oct. 1- Wahama

A

Oct. 1-North Gallla

H

Oct. 15- Kygar Creak

A

Oct. 22- Symmes Valley

'H

Oct. 30-Eaatarn (Sat.)

A

Nov. 5- Southwastam

H

\

Peuple

A
A
A
H

Oct. 1- Federal Hocking
Oct. 1-K yger Creak
Oct. 1$- Southwestern

A

Oct.22- Waterford

H

Oct. 30-Southern (Sat.)
Nov. 5-North Gallla

H
A

Nov. 12- Frontler

H

SERV:V
!lANK ' \

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp;Heating

Pomeroy, Ohio

E. 2nd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2036

Pomeroy, o.

I

'/

I

I
\

I

pomeroy
rutl~nd nationa
, ;tuppers pla1ns bank
1

I

I
I
I

v'

pomeroy

'•

the bank of
the century
established 187

OHIO

RN:INE

·-~--- --· -

FDIC
...
~-

trow's Steak House

I

I

I

I

RACINE
:iOME NAnONAL
BANK

j

fuUll

.

Goessler Jewelry Store

I

JUeigH LuUtiiY .

H

Sept. 10-Hannan Trace
Sept. n-:symm•• Valley
Sept. 24-A lexand•r

H
A

I

Downing-Childs . lnsurance
Agency

·~·

~ ··

'

Middleport, Ohio
. I

Moore's in Pomeroy
124 W. Main Street

G&amp;J Auto Parts

heritage house

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport. Ohio

'

Pomeroy Rower Shop

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

•'
I

I

Rutland, Ohio
-

Dan Thompson Ford

Powell's Super Valu

Rutland Department Store

[&gt;

,

.

Pomeroy Landmark

FR IENDLY BANK"

'

1:

Town and Counby Shopping Center

Pomeroy, Ohio

" THE

1:

· Fartners Bank

[•

.

P. J. Pauley

Elberfelds in Pomeroy

'

P~meroy,

Nationwide Insurance
307 Spring Ave .. 992-23i8, Pomeroy,p.

Ohio

.
•

"Phebe's Store"
Racine, Ohio

POMEROY, OHIO

l·

Middleport, Ohio

'
'

Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales

Meigs Equipment Co.

r

Mark VStore

Racine ·Food Market

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gravely Tractor Sales

Kingsbury Mobile Homes

Cadi llac-Oidsmobile
Pomeroy, Ohio

Sales and Service
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

-

King Builders

McClure's Dairy Isle
I

Supp~

Co.

Marguerite's Shoe Shop

· Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

102 E. Main

Betty Ohlinger

I.
I.

Pomeroy, Oh~o

The

Dai~

'

The football season is upon us once again and these area banks would

Sentinel

like to take this opportunity to salute the football players, the band

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, 0 .

members and cheerleaders.

.

Valley Lumber &amp; Supp~ Co.

Western Auto Associate Store

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

•
.

Waid Cross Sons

Buick, Pontiac, Opel, GMAC
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

. 992-7711

Ridenour 1V ~:ces

W. Main

992-3535

Meigs Tire Center Inc.

Racine, o. 949-2020
Chester, 0 . 985-3307

Middleport. Ohio

Pomeroy. 0 .

992-2184

home team! We '~ behind you 100% !

Pomeroy,O.

1976 S.E.O.A.L Football Schedule and Score Card

Meigs Inn
992-3629

Sugar Run Aour Mill

.

I

992-5130

Thomas L. Goett

J&amp;R Sport Shop

Erwin's Gulf Service

Pomeroy, 0.

Support your team this year. Let's make it a winning season for our

Reuter-Bragan Ins.

Tom's Carryout

Pomeroy, o.

John Fultz. Mgr.

striving for perfection.
These area banks think that our youth is the county's greatest asset.

Middleport, Ohio

Welker's Ashland Service Station

Pomeroy, 0.

We would like to recognize our youth for the many hours they put in

Goeglein Brothers Gravel CO.

Racine. Ohio

Meigs Auto Parts

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

(

' •·

Pomeroy, o.

)

DATE

..

Veterans Memorial Hospital

SEPT. 10

Pomeroy, 0.

Pomeroy, Ohio

SEPT. 17

. ..

The Sewing Center

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
'

Modern

Pomeroy,

o.

Rawlings-Coats .Funeral Home Dairy Valley, Middleport, Ohio Country Cousins Cookshoppe
.
.

'

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio.

Middleport, Ohio

.

'

992-2178

.

Gateway Supermarket
Middleport, Ohio

Sears Catalog Merchant Store

Cash Bahr
Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Bahr Clothiers

.

•

.

Supp~

.Francis Florist

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2644

.

Fabric Shop

Pomeroy, Ohio

Singer Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Rutland Furniture·.

'

ATHENS

•

'

••
••

Arnold Grate

Ebersbach Hardware

K&amp;C Jewelers.
Keepsake Diamond Rings
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

-

985·4100

•

Olester,

o.

•

'

Ewing Funeral Home

Nelson's Drug,

Pomeroy, Ohio
•

Pomeroy, Ohio

ocr. 1
ocr. a
ocr. 15
ocr. 22
ocr. 29

x Waverly
A

'

.
~I

NOV. 12

c
w

At
x Gallipolis
A
At
x Meigs
M

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L

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••

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•
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••

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x Wellslon

w

G

Ironton (H. C.)
G
I
~ Meig s

G

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x Ironton

x Logan
G

AI
x Jackson

L

w

x Gallipolis
G
I
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x Jackson
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x Waverly

w

L

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G

I

A

G

x Wellston

A

~Logan

x Wellston

x Athens

w

p

Jefferson
OJ
At

c

G

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x Jackson

A

I

Chillicothe

At

X• LEAGUE GAMES

••
•
•

'

Portsmouth

w

At
Porstsmouth
p

J

At
Lexington
NL
L

Wheelersburg
J

L

Miami Trace
MT
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L
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· x Meigs
J

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Hilliard

L

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Briggs
w
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A
w

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w

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x Logan

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Wa
We

w

Nelsonville

w

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At Washington
C. House
w
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x Meigs
AI
x Logan

A

M

x Meigs
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Wheelersburg

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w

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AI
x Waverly

B

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x Waverly

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Belpre

x Jackson

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Ripley, W.Va .
M
R

x Jackson
J
M

x Waverly
'L
w

w

pp

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x Ironton
L

x Logan
J

H

Pt . Pleasant

WEUSTON

WAVERLY

X

w
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x Athens
A
Meigs
M
xLogan
L

CLIP &amp; SAVE

•

Middleport, o.

At
Coal Grove

x Logan

•

State Farm Insurance
Bill Fletcher

Circleville
A

NOV. 5

. RusselL Ky.
I
R

G

St. Charles
CST

••

'

Pomeroy, Ohio
'

Riggs Used Cars Inc.
'

. ·Dale C. Wamer Insurance Agency

}

Royal Crown Bottling Co.

M

A

SEPT. 24

-

At
Rock Hill

Mari.etta

MEIGS ·

IRONTON

GALLIPOLIS

l

-·

&gt;

RECORD SCORES AFTER .THE
LEnER USED TO INDICATE
THE TEAMS

�1
1- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlepori-P!IIIleroy, 0., Friday, Sept.I0,!976

Htre'slhtpl.. You
Klclc Oft A Great Year!

1976

~~)

/

/
/

It's the crack of pads mingled with the roar af home team
crowd as the goal line is crossed for the winning score.
It's a chorus of cheerleaders leading a mob of fans who sit on
cold benches·warmed by blankets, hot chocolate or whatever fits in
a hip pocket flask . It's legend - like the Gripper or the Four
Horsemen. It's rivalry - like Ohio State vs . Michigan.
To the players, it's a culmination of weeks of grass drills,
scrimmages and just plain sweat- and it's worth very bit of the
·
'
effort.
Altogether, it adds up to a game Americans go a little craz;y
over every fa II - footba II.
.·
.
.
·
. The local merchants who sponsor this page wish the best of
luck to the area teams, who, through their outstanding efforts,
bring the joy of gridiron madness to Meigs County.

e
1

/

._...
WHITE FALCON SCHEDULE
A

Sept. 3- Wayne
Sept. 10- Hannan
Sept. 17- Fed. Hocking

Sept. 10- Federal Hocking

H
H

Sept. 24-Duval

Sept, 17- Hannan Trace

"

O~t.

1- Raclne
Oct. 1- M IIton
Oct. 15-"Calhoun
Oct.22- WInfield
Oct. 29- 0PEN
Nov. 5- luffalo (P)
Nov. 12-Siatenvllle

H
A .
-

A
A
H
H

A Hom e /l11nk ·
Fur

EASTERN EAGLES

SOUTHERN TORNADOS

'

Sept. 24-Waterford

H

Oct. 1- Wahama

A

Oct. 1-North Gallla

H

Oct. 15- Kygar Creak

A

Oct. 22- Symmes Valley

'H

Oct. 30-Eaatarn (Sat.)

A

Nov. 5- Southwastam

H

\

Peuple

A
A
A
H

Oct. 1- Federal Hocking
Oct. 1-K yger Creak
Oct. 1$- Southwestern

A

Oct.22- Waterford

H

Oct. 30-Southern (Sat.)
Nov. 5-North Gallla

H
A

Nov. 12- Frontler

H

SERV:V
!lANK ' \

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp;Heating

Pomeroy, Ohio

E. 2nd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2036

Pomeroy, o.

I

'/

I

I
\

I

pomeroy
rutl~nd nationa
, ;tuppers pla1ns bank
1

I

I
I
I

v'

pomeroy

'•

the bank of
the century
established 187

OHIO

RN:INE

·-~--- --· -

FDIC
...
~-

trow's Steak House

I

I

I

I

RACINE
:iOME NAnONAL
BANK

j

fuUll

.

Goessler Jewelry Store

I

JUeigH LuUtiiY .

H

Sept. 10-Hannan Trace
Sept. n-:symm•• Valley
Sept. 24-A lexand•r

H
A

I

Downing-Childs . lnsurance
Agency

·~·

~ ··

'

Middleport, Ohio
. I

Moore's in Pomeroy
124 W. Main Street

G&amp;J Auto Parts

heritage house

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport. Ohio

'

Pomeroy Rower Shop

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

•'
I

I

Rutland, Ohio
-

Dan Thompson Ford

Powell's Super Valu

Rutland Department Store

[&gt;

,

.

Pomeroy Landmark

FR IENDLY BANK"

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Town and Counby Shopping Center

Pomeroy, Ohio

" THE

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· Fartners Bank

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P. J. Pauley

Elberfelds in Pomeroy

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P~meroy,

Nationwide Insurance
307 Spring Ave .. 992-23i8, Pomeroy,p.

Ohio

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"Phebe's Store"
Racine, Ohio

POMEROY, OHIO

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Middleport, Ohio

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Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales

Meigs Equipment Co.

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Mark VStore

Racine ·Food Market

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gravely Tractor Sales

Kingsbury Mobile Homes

Cadi llac-Oidsmobile
Pomeroy, Ohio

Sales and Service
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

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King Builders

McClure's Dairy Isle
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Supp~

Co.

Marguerite's Shoe Shop

· Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

102 E. Main

Betty Ohlinger

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I.

Pomeroy, Oh~o

The

Dai~

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The football season is upon us once again and these area banks would

Sentinel

like to take this opportunity to salute the football players, the band

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, 0 .

members and cheerleaders.

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Valley Lumber &amp; Supp~ Co.

Western Auto Associate Store

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

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Waid Cross Sons

Buick, Pontiac, Opel, GMAC
Pomeroy, Ohio

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. 992-7711

Ridenour 1V ~:ces

W. Main

992-3535

Meigs Tire Center Inc.

Racine, o. 949-2020
Chester, 0 . 985-3307

Middleport. Ohio

Pomeroy. 0 .

992-2184

home team! We '~ behind you 100% !

Pomeroy,O.

1976 S.E.O.A.L Football Schedule and Score Card

Meigs Inn
992-3629

Sugar Run Aour Mill

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992-5130

Thomas L. Goett

J&amp;R Sport Shop

Erwin's Gulf Service

Pomeroy, 0.

Support your team this year. Let's make it a winning season for our

Reuter-Bragan Ins.

Tom's Carryout

Pomeroy, o.

John Fultz. Mgr.

striving for perfection.
These area banks think that our youth is the county's greatest asset.

Middleport, Ohio

Welker's Ashland Service Station

Pomeroy, 0.

We would like to recognize our youth for the many hours they put in

Goeglein Brothers Gravel CO.

Racine. Ohio

Meigs Auto Parts

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

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Pomeroy, o.

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DATE

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Veterans Memorial Hospital

SEPT. 10

Pomeroy, 0.

Pomeroy, Ohio

SEPT. 17

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The Sewing Center

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
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Modern

Pomeroy,

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Rawlings-Coats .Funeral Home Dairy Valley, Middleport, Ohio Country Cousins Cookshoppe
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Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio.

Middleport, Ohio

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992-2178

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Gateway Supermarket
Middleport, Ohio

Sears Catalog Merchant Store

Cash Bahr
Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

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Bahr Clothiers

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Supp~

.Francis Florist

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2644

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Fabric Shop

Pomeroy, Ohio

Singer Sales &amp; Service
Pomeroy, Ohio

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Rutland Furniture·.

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ATHENS

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Arnold Grate

Ebersbach Hardware

K&amp;C Jewelers.
Keepsake Diamond Rings
Pomeroy, Ohio

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Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

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985·4100

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Olester,

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Ewing Funeral Home

Nelson's Drug,

Pomeroy, Ohio
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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State Farm Insurance
Bill Fletcher

Circleville
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Pomeroy, Ohio
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Riggs Used Cars Inc.
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Royal Crown Bottling Co.

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SEPT. 24

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Rock Hill

Mari.etta

MEIGS ·

IRONTON

GALLIPOLIS

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RECORD SCORES AFTER .THE
LEnER USED TO INDICATE
THE TEAMS

�1- Th&amp;DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept, 10.1976

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 10, 1976

~';iclp · Martins
·!'
Uy
Helen
Hottel
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When • Wlnlt Gella Bllnlt!
DEAR READERS:
When "Walking the Une" asked otber readera, "What's
the fiOiutloo if a highly sexed fm~ale marries an underae~ed
partner ?" I predicted much responSe- - especially the
t'OITitniserative kind - but !wasn't prepared lor the deluge of
mail her query rece ived.
Hill! niy cOrrespondents wrole, " If your marriage Is
Oth~ise good, resign yourself."
Son• ~ (not many) argued, "Any woman, if she's wise and
involved enough, can keep her husband's batteries charged."
(Not always true, Wllortunalely.)
A f ew repor~d IIley reached workable compromises
through therapy, after learning to Understand each other'•
needs. (The need for acceptance 88 a low-key person Ia jll8! as
valid, men say, as their wives' need for high-key se~. )
·n,en there were those who recommended health foods.
me~a-vitamlns, especially "E," and a bevy of booka, from
Adelle Davin to Dr. Dnvid Reuben.
, And still others who shouled, ''Divorce him," insisting, "If
he s Inadequate in the bedroom, he'll be lnadequa~
ebewhere." (Again, noi always true, and don't you believe it
- witl10ut solid proof.)
But over one-fourth of my women writers (and a like
number of men ) revealed long - ijnd short-tennaHalrs - and
moot felt little guilt. "It's not a perfect Sjl)uUon,:' said one,
"but it's the only !!Olution in town, and it keeps oilr marriage
:;olvcnt. "
·
f!ere arc other comments :

SOUTHERN'S COACHES - Mickey Winebrenner, left, assistant coach; Bill Jewell,
head coach and Bill Baer, assistant coach·.
sftNIOR PLAYERS - Front, 1-r, Joe Brown, Scott
Wolfe, Greg Cundiff, Doug Warden, Eric Dunning, Kevin

Athenians in
Racine tonight
RACINE - At · Racine,
Coach Bill. Jewell and his
Southern Tornados will be
trying to bounce back after a
disappointing season last fall
when they kick off their year
by hosting Federal Hocking
of Athens County.
Senior AII..SVAC tailback
Steve Boso will be a main cog
In the backfield, and class·
rna~ Joe Brown will be
caUing the signals at quar·
terback. BoS() weighs in at a
solid 173 while· Brown is at
180. 193 lb. Steve Hendricks
will be crashing the line at
fullback while i59 lb. senlor
AI Hill will be rWUJing from
the 'lrin8 back spot.
Four seniors and a junlor
make up the middle of the
offensive line that will be
opening up holes. Junior
Martin Bush at 1791b. is at a
tackle and senior Dan Wolfe
1.1 11 the. other. seruor Olris
ForbeS will be hiking the ball

I

and classmates Jerry
Johnson and Roger Adkins
hold down the guard posts ,
Rounding out the offensive
charges will be juniors Mike
Huddleston and Eric Dun·
nlng, at tight and split ends,
respectively.
Also seeing some action
will be Scott Wolfe at cen~r ,
Danny Dudding at guard ,
Kevin Willford at tackle, and
'Scott Souder and Do ug
Warden at ends .
Alot of that offensive team
will be going both ways. On
defense, Huddleston and
Bush will be charging in from
the ends while Hendricks and
Forbes make up the wall as
tackles . J ohnson plays
middle guard and Boso will
be at the roving "mons~r "
position. Hill will be one of the S~ve Hill will start at cor·
Others who will be seeing
defensive halfbacks while 131 nerback while Souder and action on defense are Wolfe
lb. senior Greg Cundiff is the Junlor Kelly Winebrenner will and sophomore Ed Smith at
other pass defender. Junlor be at the linebacker posts.
tackle, Dudding at middle

Willford; second row, Jerry JohnSJn, Chrls F~rbes, Roger
Adkins, Danny Wolfe, Steve Boso, AI Hill, steve
Hendricks.

. +++ .

The Southern High School Football Team
guard, and Adkins at end. liS-pounder Billy Harris will
Warden and Dunning will see be getting a shot .at the
some action at defensive monster position.
halfback while sophomore
Jewell is assisted this year

by Mlck Winebrenner and
John Constanzo. With lots of
seniors and experience, the ·
Tornados could be a

challenger in the SVAC this
fall. They open their league
schedule when the travel to
Hannan Trace next week.

How

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EAGLE SENIORS - Fourteen seniors open the .
ae&amp;Sllllilnlght against Hannan Trace at Eastern. Front, 1·
r, are John Evllllll, Steve Ha,uber, Kevin Barton, Bntce

Ri!De, Noah Hysell, Jim Ha.wthorne and Bob McClure;
back row, Dave Mills, Mark Lawson, Buddy Drak.e, Larry
Loogenette, Richard Mora, Mike Stnith · and Bob
VanKampen.

Eagles hosting Wildcat eleven
EAsT MEIGS - Out Eaatern way

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frrst year coach Joe
Mltdlem and IU Ea8lem Eagles are playing host to the
1 ' - Trace Wildcats in a Southern Valley Conference
-mer. The Eagles lost OJl)y four men last year and if the
Eagles get olf to a good start they cQU!.d prove to be stroog
cmlerllen for the f!N AC tiUe.
I
Settlor letterman Bob McClure, weighing in at 145lbs., will
lad the team at the quarterback spot. Classmate Kevin
Birlcln will be running from one halfback spo\ while senlor
letterman Dave Mills will be crashing the line from the full·
back l!pOI. Rounding out the backfield will be junior letterman ·
Joe Kuhn. Barton weighs In at 143, Mills tips the scales at m,
llld Kulm lllands at 154.
The rest of the offelllive charge loots this way :
At the ll\llfd8 will be senior Darrell Drake who weighs in
81174 and wiD be !bowing tbe ny kl aopbolllOI'e Dan Spencer

who holds down the other guard post. Spencer goes up to tbe
line at a husky 176. Senior Johnny Evans will be centering the
ball. Senior Richard Mora, at 164, and sophomore Russell
Starcher, ala muscular 196, are still fighting it out for a tackle
positioo. Both will probably see lots of action Friday night.
Junior letterman Randy Boston, at a big 209 lbs. appears to
have the other tackle position wrapped up,
Leading the passing attack will be seniors Bruce Riffle at
split-end and Mike Smith at tight end. They tip the scales a~l43
and 160, respectively,
Lots of these boys will be playing both ways. Barton,
Drake, and senior Jim Hawthorne, who is at 14apounds, will be
at linebackers while the fourth linebacker position will
probably be shared by Spencer and sophomore Rusty Wigal,
who tipe the scales at a muscular 166, Another linebacker who
will also be running some offensive plays from fullback will be

EASTERN COACHES.- Head'Coach Joe Mitchum is flanked by assistant Ed Wilson,
·left, and Arch Rose, right.

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COLUMBUS (UPi)
Dream Maker, relatively
unknown among racing fans
unllllaslweekend, beat out a
field of 10 classy 3-year-olds
In winning the $30,000 Little
Brown Jug Preview at Scioto
Downs Thursday nlghf.
Dream Maker, third at the
three-quarter pole, came on
strong In the stretch to win by
a head over fast-closing
~usty Omal),a. The winner
covered the mile In 2' 03 3-5
over a track rated slow
following 8 shower earlier In
the evening .
Favore'd Warm Breeze, a
Brei Hanover offspring who
paced to a world record time
of 1 : 5~ ~- 5 on a mile track In
the second heat of the Review
Futurltv at Springfield, Ill.,
earlier ihls season, was third.
The winner, a Race Time
colt owned and trained by
Dick Oldfield of Adrian,
Mich., paid $5.60, $4.00 and
$2.60. Gusty Omaha returned
$17.80 and $3.80 and Warm
8reeie paid $2.20.
bream Maker, driven · by
Glen Garnsey, surprised the
racing world last weekend at
DuQuoin, Ill.. with an Jm.
presslve 1:5&lt;1 3-5 clocking In
whipping a solid J.year-old
Geers Stake field , which
Included Warm Breeze.
Thursday night's race was
a warmup to the famed Little
Brown Jug fo be run at
Delaware, Ohio, later this
month.
f
Oak lawn VIctoria (t) and
Spirit Creek (7) combined for
a nightly double payoff of

l

Darst .reunion enjoyed
Chiid•·en and their !amities
uf the lale Jasper M. Darst
held a reunion Labor Day at
the Forest Acres Park.
' Attending were. Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Darst , Peggy
Anne, Vincent, Mary, ~e
Dee, Misty and Joseph, Mrs.
Linda Darst Haught, Chris
' and Chris tine, Mr. and Mrs.
,Dale ·Darst, Jr., Mike, Kelly,
and lJsa, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Rathburn, Robin,
Bobby, Mark, Chuckle,

Open On Monday
Starting Se pt. 13th

HOURS
9:00-3:00
Phone 992-2725

A crowd of 5,687 wagered

$361.644.

1931b.'senior Mllrk Lawson. Eva!lB and Mills will be protecting
the ends of the line on defense, while Mora and Boston will be
plugging up the middle in the tackle position~. Defensive half·
backs will be Kuhn and Smith, while McClure will be playing
the safety.
With lots of lettermen, good size, and depth this could be
the year oft)Je Green and White. We'll know more afler Friday
nlght.

Eastern High School Football Team
f

ran

$183.20.

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Sports Briefs
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
By
United
Press · IUPI)
- Damon Coy scored
International
• his fourth victory In eight
outings lhls year with a twolOS ANGELES (UP!) John Cappelletti will start at length win over favored
·Denny at Northfield
fullback and Lawrence Empire
Park ThuMy nigh!.
McCutcheon at halfback in
Slick H II as third.
the Los Angeles Rams '
Damon Coy , driven by
seaso n opener Sunday Ernest Kaufman, covered the
In 2: 11 1-5 over a
against the Atlanta Falcons. mile
"sloppy" track and paid
Rams ' Coach Chuck Knox sa.ao, $3,00 and S2 .&gt;10.
also announced Thursday
The big triple combination
that' 11)-year veteran Tom of 5-0 was worth $162.60.
A crowd of 2,064 wagered
Mack will retijrn as a $227,862
.
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permanent captain along
with Merlin Olsen.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
- An unidentified bettor
collected $7,190 with a $20
exacta ticket Wednesday
night at Hollywood Park
when longshot Peeping Tom
woo and Brave Spring placed
second in the seventh race
winnil)g combination.
A $5 exacta ticket returned
a whopping $1,790, There
were four $10 tickets and 44 $5
tickets sold
on the
combination. ·

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th~y

DEAUHELEN:
"Wa]l(lng the Line" should hear my story, but please don't
take It as advice:
II started with my mother. She was·a beautiful woman and
had many lovers, while being a good wife, an excellent
hou.~ekeeper and parent.
My sister has a lovely family, an important career, and tbe
same lover for over 30 years, while remaining happily
married.
r had my first lover at the age of 33 afler 15 years of
marriage. Four more followed; the current one is in his ninth
year, l arn 51, he is 60, If we part, I h9pe to find another.
B&lt;lth my lover. and I lead active community lives, are
upstlmdlng, righteous citizens in every way, respected by
friends, family, and well thought of in our business association
and religious affiliations. No one suspects. He is a good
husband and father. I am a good wife and mother.
My hu.qband is a wonderful man. He is the most important
person in the world wme and I love him dearly , But I need and
want and enjoy another man in my life.
I feel no guilt and I mak-e no excuses. This is right for me.
- NO NAME
.
DEAR HELEN: .
If WTL and her husband reaUy love one another, they can
dl,scu.qs the problem, and if he's liberated enough (few men
:U-e ), he won't feel threatened when she Is attracted to
someone else ~mporarUy. After lill; If she likes ~nis, .;md be
doesn't, would he insist she never agafu touch a tennis racket?
I'd ~sk for her address so we could correspood, but I can just
hear all your readers smirking, "Ah HA!"UEAR HELEN:
I wouldn't jeopardize my (somewhat undersexed)
husband's love just for a fling, so I'll take it out in - ·
DAYDREAMING
DEAR HELEN:
My husband, a very religious, very repressed,.but withall
a wonderful man, became impotent before he was 35, and he
prefers this status, though he's still affectionate.
For 17 years now, I have had two separate compartments
in myself, one labeled "Husband, · Home, Family,
Companlonship, Love;" and tbe other labe,Ied "W3)'111th, Sex,
·and a different love and companionship" - with my lover. I
don't feel promiscuous or even unfaithful, because I'm faithful
tobothmy men. - NEEDED:z.;wo"ausBANDS"

lOS ANGELES (UPI) Tennis star Billie Jean King,
who dropped out of singles
competition last year after
winning her sixth singles
championship at Wimbletoo
will enler two singles tourna:
ments this fall.
" Entering these two

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Kay's Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd . St.
Middleport,

o.

Richie , Terry, Mrs, Ada
Moron and Dave, Mrs.
Bonnie Coy, Kim, Cindy, and
Billy, David Carr, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Darst, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Davidson, Mfss
Garnett Darst, Miss Uda
Btlggs, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Grate, Jeni Grate, Mrs. Joan
Wells, Jody and Tim, Dano
King, Harold Carson, Mr. and
Mrs. John Davidson and
Walter Davidson.

The fourth a1111ual rewlion
of tile family of the late
Edward Martin and Mary
Frances Blankenship Martin
was held Sunday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Martin, Beaver.
Recognlzed were Joey Ed
Martin and family of Fort
Bragg, N. C. who traveled the
farthest; Angela Martin, 111montlw)ld daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Joey Ed Marlin,
and Mrs. Clara Howery,
Pomerqy, the oldest per!Wn
attending , Mrs. Thomas
Mitchell, Columbus, was
elected president, and Mrs.
Michael Marshall, secretary •
treasurer . Games were
played during the day.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Martin, Doug and
Kathy Martin, Beaver; Mrs.
Robert Roush (Madeline
Martin), Charleston, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Everett See,
Mr. and Mrs. ThomaS Mit.
chell, Mr . and Mrs. Michael

REEDSVILLE · - The
Reedsville I (Rockets) LJttle
League baseball ~am and
their families held a victory
picnic recently at the
Bellville Locks picnic area.
Two cakes, decorated with
the names of the team, were .
presented by Marlene Put.
·man and VIrginia Car~r .
Trophies were · presented to
Bill Durst, Hugh Martin and
Larry Harris, Coaches;
Martba Durst, scorekeeper
and Don Jones, for giving
super help . Individual
trophies were presented each
team memher. A softball
game was enjoyed by aU.
Allending were Mrs. Orva
Jean Holter, Mark and Judy;
Mrs. Doris Williams. and
.Jimmy Wells,.Mr. and Mrs.
"1\obert Larkins, Jerry and .
Roberta; Mrs . Teresa
Coltins, Brian and Angela;
Mrs. Virginla Carter and
Jimmy ; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Jones, Gene , Patty arid
Charles, Mr. ai!d Mrs. Larry
Ha.rris, Larry and Keith;
Mrs . Marlene Putman,
Ricky, Donny and Keith;
Mrs. Donna Connolly, John
and Dale; Mrs . Delores
Foster, Scott; Sara and Sybil;
Mrs. Mary Cowdery and

Party honors
Tom Tobin

HOLIDAY VISITORS
Labor Day weekend guests
of Mrs. Cora Grindley and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Grindley
were Mr. and Mrs. Robin
Lynch and Mr, and Mrs. Jim
Warner, Columbus . Mrs.
Lynch is employed at ,
Ashland OU in Colwnbus and
.her husband is a senior at
Ohio State. Mrs. Warner is
employed at Unlve~ity
A birthday and gotng away
Hospital and her husband, party was held recently in
Jim, is employed at In· honor of Thomas Ray Tobin,
dustrial Nucleonlcs.
18, on SundaY. He is the ~Wn of
Mrs. Bess Hendricks, Mid·
dleport, and the Ia~ Robert
R. Tobin, Sr. Thomas left
early Tuesday to join the U.
S. Navy ·at Great Lakes, ill.
Refreshments were in a
red, whlte and blue color
scheme with a birthday-bon
voyage cake, ice cream and
soft drinks being served by
his 100ther. Al~ndlng were
his sisters, Barbara jo, Terri
'and Tina, and a brother,
Arthur, Larry Hendricks,
Jack Coleman, Rick and
Charlie Smith, Richard Berry
and Beth Vaughan who •
surprised Thomas by laking
him to dinner. Unable to
at~nd the party was Robert
Tobin, Jr.
for all your home

HERE

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Entertainment anet
Appliance NOidS

DOXOL

Iron-on decals
can 't be removed

Bv Poltv Cr• mer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Please
!ell me how to remove an
"iron-on" decal from a cottoo
T-ehirt. - JOYCE.
DEAR JOYCE - My a&amp;
ower IJ not good. 1 waa IDformed ·by a maker of ouch
decals thatthe transfer Ink ln
the decals fuses with the
Iabrie to whteh 11 is appUed
and cannot be removed. _
POLLY.

BARITONE THEOOOR Uppman will be the finl
concert of the 197S.77 Tri.COunty. Community Concert
Associatioo. Uppman will perform Saturday, Oct. 9, 8
p.m. at tile Gallla Academy High School auditorium.
Admission to association concerts is by membership only,
Headquarters is loca~ at 16 Stale St., Gallipolis.
'

Larry, Mrs. Dottie Lance,
Mike, Laurie and Usa ; Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Martin,
Michael and Matthew; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Durst, David,
Dennis, Debbie and Dee Dee ;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swain
and C~rl; Terry Reynolds,
Jimmy Randolph, Wilson and
Sherri Putman, Glen and
Mike Putman and Tony and
Carrie Ann Gilllan.

Baritone included
on concert schedule

American baritone
Theodor Uppman will appear
in Gallipolis Saturday, Oct. 9,
8 p.m. at the Gallia Academy
High School auditorium
Under the auspices of the Tri·
County Coinmunlty Concert
Associ a lion.
The concert association
serves Jackson, Meigs,
Mason and Gallla Counties.
BffiTHDAY FETED
The
JOembership drive for
The sixth birthday of
the
197S.77
concert season
Christopher Grindley was
observed recently with a began this week with renewal
party at the home of his of old memberships and will
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger conclude next week with a
Grindley and his grand· new member campaign.
mother, Mrs. Cora Grindley, Akickoff dinner for the new
Mlnersvllle. Attending were inember drive wm be held
Christopher's sisters, Lisa Monday, Sept. 13, 7 P·!" · at
and Lorna, Mr . and Mrs. . Rio Grande College cafeleria .
Other concerts on this
David Watson and ·Dina ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs . season 's schedule ·include
Robin Lynch· of Columbus; The New York Brass Quinlet,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warner, March 16 and pianist Thomas
Colwnbus ; Bill Harris, Rt. 1, Schumacher on April 22.
Uppman, a gil~ luminary
Racine.
of the Metropolitan Opera
and a star of concerts, radio
and ~levision made his debut
at' the Metropolitan Opera in
RUMMAGE SALE SET
"Pelleas et Mellsande" under
There will be a rummage the baton of Pierre Monteux.
sale at St. Paul's , Unl~d Another of his early roles was
Methodist Church annex, that of the whimsical bird
Tuppers PlaiJis,' today and catcher , · Papageno, in
Saturday from 9:30am. to 4 Mozart's "The Magic Flu~, "
pm.
Under the baton of Bruno
Walter .
The success which more
than any other started Upp·
MRS. ROACH UL .
man on the road to fame was
Mrs. Carl (Dorothy ) his appearance in the title
Roach, Wright St., Pomeroy, role of Benjamin Btit~n 's
entered the Holzer Medical opera "Billy Budd" in its
Cen~r and is scheduled to world premier at Covent
undergo surgery today. Her . Garden. It was the highlight
room number is 220A.
of the London 1951·52 season
·
~·
with the London Times ob·
serving, "The Billy Budd of
the American baritone , Mr .
TheOdor
Uppman, was the
Holzer Medical Center
most
conv in c ing
~Discharges, Sept. 9)
Virginia Barrett, Mrs . ma~rializa~on of Melvute's
Frank Beckner and son, ball-drawn character, and his
Walter Carpenter, Anita
Cordell, Denver Cox, Mabel
Day, Luda Durst, Edna Ellis,
Dale Fair, Ernest Gahm,
James Higgins, Anna Kinder,
SON BORN '
Pauline Little, Marilyn
Mr
.
and
Mrs . Daniel
McCartney, John Morgan,
Hensler
of
Racine
are an·
Pauline Moyer, Conrad
nouncing
the
birth
of
a son;
Ohlinger, Mildred Osborne,
Aug.
ll,
at
the
Holzer
Medical
Cena Parsons, Ha.ttie Queen,
Eric Rainey, Flain Ra Iliff, Center. The baby has been
Mrs. Curtis Roush and son, named Kelly Clayton. Mr .
Brenda Smeltzer, Jody and Mrs. Hensler ha ve
Stewart, Benjamin Stumbo, another son, James Clair, a
Pearl Stumbo, Janet Tillis, second grader at the Racine
James Ward, Sandra Waugh, Elementary School. Mr. and
Howard Well, Michelle Mrs. Raymond Hensler,
Wright, Shannon Wyatt, Racine, are the paternal
grandparents , and Mrs .
Magnolia Whittington.
Elaine Harvey, Logan, is the
(Birth, Sept. 9)
ma~rnal grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Rose ,
son, Long Bottom.

TV &amp; Appljilnce
Gas service .
Racine, Ohio
Diester, Ohio

great monologue in the form
of a broadside ballad was
sung with noble str,ength and
· ~nderness . "
·
When "Billy Budd " was
introduced in America in
19~2, he sa~ the lead with the
NBC TV Opera , and in
November, 1970 he again
starred tn the role in the first
professionally staged per·
formance of "Bifly Budd" in
the Uni~d Sta~s with the
Lyric Opera of Chicago.
Admission to . the Uppman
concert and other associa Uon
presentations is by mem·
bership only. The association
headquar~rs are loca~d at
the Gallipolis Chamber of
Commerce office, Gallipolis .

Auxiliary

Be Your Housekeeper

CHESTER - The Ladles
Auxiliary of the fire depart·
men t met Wednesday
evening Sept. 1, at the
' firehouse ,
'President Opal Hollon ,
presiding opened the meeting
with The Lord 's Prayer,
followed by roll. call .
The secretary's report was
read by Ethel Orr and the
treasurer 's report by Opal
Wickham. Committee reports
were given and it was decided
to order Christmas cards for
sale. Plans for the annual
picnic of the firemen and
auxiliary were discussed .
Larry Smith, president of the
fire department, met with the
auxiliary and · thanked them
for their help and donations
for the county fair and asked
for their help for the Lahor
Day barbecue .
Members present were
Opal Hollon, Clara Conroy,
Cleo DeTray , Clarice Allen,
Ethel Orr, Erma Cleland, Joy
Clark, Sheila Taylor, Opal
Wickham, Karla Chevalier,
Margaret Christy and Inzy
Newell.
·

as it cleans

Middleport

Middleport Book Store
Middleport, 0.

For a limited time, with the purchase
of any large 16 oz. soft drink you
can take home a 16 oz. Coca-Cola glass.
· The total price for the larg drink and the glass is only 49c . Start
collecting your set of eight glasses today! (Empty glasses may be
purchased for J9c)

in our dining

fast

BAKER FURNITURE

Verse of Helen Steiner Rice

Take Home A Glass Today

Enjoy your meal

sss

We Feature Inspirational
cards Wrth The

I

Full Size Hoover Upright Cleaner.

It beats
as it sweeps

also "" JliCKO!Q up · wnen
cleaning the tub. - JEAN.
DEAR POLLY - Sa'ews
are often hare! to get tbro!Jih
wood and other surfaces, but
I have found an easy and f88l
way, Before trying to put the
screw in the surface, rub bits
of leftover soap arollhd the .
screw. Use your screwdriver
and find the screw goes in
easier and·ln a jiffy. This also
works with nails. - LINDA Y.
DEAR PoLLY - I make
DEAR POLLy - My Pet four bOles of dusUng powder
Peeve is with the milkers of for less than thirty cents by
pet foods. When one acquires filling empty dll!Ung powder
a new pet, it may take a while boxes with corn starch and
to learn just what foods they tben spraying the con~nts
like. It is necessary to spend a with my favorite spray
couple of dollars on different perfwne. The ''powder" bas
foods they may not eat. It a lovely Odor. -HELEN.
seems the food manufac·
DEAR POLLY - Those
turers could offer sample size who cannot 11fford to buy
packages o( the different expensive porducts to get rid .
foods to be .used 88 a trial, of flies, mo8qultoes and other ·
without wasting money oo a such bugs can just bUy a box ·
Jot of high priceil cana and of mothballs. Place two or
boxes. - MRS. P.S.
three along a window sill in
DEAR POLLY - Do tell each room. U there are
Lula that I keep my suitcases children put the mothballs on
free of mildew or mold by the upper sill. Renew .from
keeping a bar of toilet soap in time to time and you 'II find
each one. Af~r using a case 1 this Is a pretty sure'and cheap
always put in a bar before it way of eliminating such
is stored. I often eyen leave a pests. -OUVINE.
bar of my favori~ brand in
Polly will send you one of
the suitcase when I travel. - her "peachy" thank-you
LOUISE,
. cards, Ideal for framlDg or
DEAR POLLY ~ I of~n placing In your family
'take the children along when scrapbook, U she uses your
I go shopping, so I have made favorite Pointer, Peeve or
a list of the varioua restrooms Problem In her column. Write
and 'comfort · stations Polly's Polnlers In care of
available on quick notice . In thls newsnaiN'r.
many smaller towns the
department stores of~n do
RIVEb1ui MEDICAL
not have such facillties, so a
GROUP
list of bus and gas statioos
Adjocenlfo
arid public buildings that do is
Veterams
always carried in my purse
Memorial
Hospital
as a wise precaution. R. A. AVERtON, M.D.
CLAIRE.
A. G. SOLA, M.D.
DEAR POLLY - Try
JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
putting several of the suction . C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.
cups (used to hold soap) in
ffllce Hours; Hl·12 1.111.
the bottom of your tub or
Mon.-Sat., 2-4 p.m. Mon .·
Fri., 7·8 p.m. Mon., Wed.,
shower as a help to provide
frj
traction, whim ll,etting out of
· 'PHONE 992-33~1. .
the tub or shower . They can

has meetin~

Let 'Hoover'

SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S

If

Polly's Poi'nters

e'

FERTILIZER
FEED
QUA~ITY SEED
HYBRID CORN

NEW YORK (UP!) Johnny Weismilller, Buater
Crabbe, Sergio Oliva and
Boyer Coe will be inducted
into the World Body Bulldlng
Guild's · Ha.ll of Fame In
ceremonies at the WBBG's
Third Annual Testlnionial
Dinner at New York's
Sheraton Hotel, Saturday,
. Sept. 11.
.

Marshall, Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Drown, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Wickline, daughter ,
Debbie, and Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold McDade, Bob, Delina,
Selina and Arnold, Jr., aU of
Colwnblia.
Mr .. and Mrs. Uoyd
Thompson, Bruce and TOdd ,
South Point; Mr. and Mrs.
Osby Martin, Adam and
Patricia, Mr . and Mrs. Leslie
Gibbs, Jim, Brian and Stacy,
Mr. and Mrs . . Edward
Martin, Rick and Jeff, Mrs.
Lydia Hysell, all of Pometoy:
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin
and son, Mike, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Kibble and Brian
Beeler, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Morris and
children, Rt. I, Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Joey
Martin and children, Angela
and Heideki, Fort Bragg, N.
C. ; Mr. and Mrs. Emile
Thomas, Akron ; Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Martin, Jr., Jeff
and Jan, Belpre.

Victory party enjoyed
by Reedsville players

WHERE
DO YOU GET IT?

tournaments does not
represent a commitment to
permanenUy return to singles
competition," stressed King.
"However, my knees seem tc
be in very good shape, I feel
very good now so I decided to
·enter Phoenix and Missioo
Hills to see how I respond.''

reunite

Drive-Thru

Window Service.

�1- Th&amp;DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept, 10.1976

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 10, 1976

~';iclp · Martins
·!'
Uy
Helen
Hottel
Us ..•
'*
:-.··
,._,
~-=·

~:;
'"
....
:.~

·:·:

When • Wlnlt Gella Bllnlt!
DEAR READERS:
When "Walking the Une" asked otber readera, "What's
the fiOiutloo if a highly sexed fm~ale marries an underae~ed
partner ?" I predicted much responSe- - especially the
t'OITitniserative kind - but !wasn't prepared lor the deluge of
mail her query rece ived.
Hill! niy cOrrespondents wrole, " If your marriage Is
Oth~ise good, resign yourself."
Son• ~ (not many) argued, "Any woman, if she's wise and
involved enough, can keep her husband's batteries charged."
(Not always true, Wllortunalely.)
A f ew repor~d IIley reached workable compromises
through therapy, after learning to Understand each other'•
needs. (The need for acceptance 88 a low-key person Ia jll8! as
valid, men say, as their wives' need for high-key se~. )
·n,en there were those who recommended health foods.
me~a-vitamlns, especially "E," and a bevy of booka, from
Adelle Davin to Dr. Dnvid Reuben.
, And still others who shouled, ''Divorce him," insisting, "If
he s Inadequate in the bedroom, he'll be lnadequa~
ebewhere." (Again, noi always true, and don't you believe it
- witl10ut solid proof.)
But over one-fourth of my women writers (and a like
number of men ) revealed long - ijnd short-tennaHalrs - and
moot felt little guilt. "It's not a perfect Sjl)uUon,:' said one,
"but it's the only !!Olution in town, and it keeps oilr marriage
:;olvcnt. "
·
f!ere arc other comments :

SOUTHERN'S COACHES - Mickey Winebrenner, left, assistant coach; Bill Jewell,
head coach and Bill Baer, assistant coach·.
sftNIOR PLAYERS - Front, 1-r, Joe Brown, Scott
Wolfe, Greg Cundiff, Doug Warden, Eric Dunning, Kevin

Athenians in
Racine tonight
RACINE - At · Racine,
Coach Bill. Jewell and his
Southern Tornados will be
trying to bounce back after a
disappointing season last fall
when they kick off their year
by hosting Federal Hocking
of Athens County.
Senior AII..SVAC tailback
Steve Boso will be a main cog
In the backfield, and class·
rna~ Joe Brown will be
caUing the signals at quar·
terback. BoS() weighs in at a
solid 173 while· Brown is at
180. 193 lb. Steve Hendricks
will be crashing the line at
fullback while i59 lb. senlor
AI Hill will be rWUJing from
the 'lrin8 back spot.
Four seniors and a junlor
make up the middle of the
offensive line that will be
opening up holes. Junior
Martin Bush at 1791b. is at a
tackle and senior Dan Wolfe
1.1 11 the. other. seruor Olris
ForbeS will be hiking the ball

I

and classmates Jerry
Johnson and Roger Adkins
hold down the guard posts ,
Rounding out the offensive
charges will be juniors Mike
Huddleston and Eric Dun·
nlng, at tight and split ends,
respectively.
Also seeing some action
will be Scott Wolfe at cen~r ,
Danny Dudding at guard ,
Kevin Willford at tackle, and
'Scott Souder and Do ug
Warden at ends .
Alot of that offensive team
will be going both ways. On
defense, Huddleston and
Bush will be charging in from
the ends while Hendricks and
Forbes make up the wall as
tackles . J ohnson plays
middle guard and Boso will
be at the roving "mons~r "
position. Hill will be one of the S~ve Hill will start at cor·
Others who will be seeing
defensive halfbacks while 131 nerback while Souder and action on defense are Wolfe
lb. senior Greg Cundiff is the Junlor Kelly Winebrenner will and sophomore Ed Smith at
other pass defender. Junlor be at the linebacker posts.
tackle, Dudding at middle

Willford; second row, Jerry JohnSJn, Chrls F~rbes, Roger
Adkins, Danny Wolfe, Steve Boso, AI Hill, steve
Hendricks.

. +++ .

The Southern High School Football Team
guard, and Adkins at end. liS-pounder Billy Harris will
Warden and Dunning will see be getting a shot .at the
some action at defensive monster position.
halfback while sophomore
Jewell is assisted this year

by Mlck Winebrenner and
John Constanzo. With lots of
seniors and experience, the ·
Tornados could be a

challenger in the SVAC this
fall. They open their league
schedule when the travel to
Hannan Trace next week.

How

'

EAGLE SENIORS - Fourteen seniors open the .
ae&amp;Sllllilnlght against Hannan Trace at Eastern. Front, 1·
r, are John Evllllll, Steve Ha,uber, Kevin Barton, Bntce

Ri!De, Noah Hysell, Jim Ha.wthorne and Bob McClure;
back row, Dave Mills, Mark Lawson, Buddy Drak.e, Larry
Loogenette, Richard Mora, Mike Stnith · and Bob
VanKampen.

Eagles hosting Wildcat eleven
EAsT MEIGS - Out Eaatern way

:
•

•
'
•

frrst year coach Joe
Mltdlem and IU Ea8lem Eagles are playing host to the
1 ' - Trace Wildcats in a Southern Valley Conference
-mer. The Eagles lost OJl)y four men last year and if the
Eagles get olf to a good start they cQU!.d prove to be stroog
cmlerllen for the f!N AC tiUe.
I
Settlor letterman Bob McClure, weighing in at 145lbs., will
lad the team at the quarterback spot. Classmate Kevin
Birlcln will be running from one halfback spo\ while senlor
letterman Dave Mills will be crashing the line from the full·
back l!pOI. Rounding out the backfield will be junior letterman ·
Joe Kuhn. Barton weighs In at 143, Mills tips the scales at m,
llld Kulm lllands at 154.
The rest of the offelllive charge loots this way :
At the ll\llfd8 will be senior Darrell Drake who weighs in
81174 and wiD be !bowing tbe ny kl aopbolllOI'e Dan Spencer

who holds down the other guard post. Spencer goes up to tbe
line at a husky 176. Senior Johnny Evans will be centering the
ball. Senior Richard Mora, at 164, and sophomore Russell
Starcher, ala muscular 196, are still fighting it out for a tackle
positioo. Both will probably see lots of action Friday night.
Junior letterman Randy Boston, at a big 209 lbs. appears to
have the other tackle position wrapped up,
Leading the passing attack will be seniors Bruce Riffle at
split-end and Mike Smith at tight end. They tip the scales a~l43
and 160, respectively,
Lots of these boys will be playing both ways. Barton,
Drake, and senior Jim Hawthorne, who is at 14apounds, will be
at linebackers while the fourth linebacker position will
probably be shared by Spencer and sophomore Rusty Wigal,
who tipe the scales at a muscular 166, Another linebacker who
will also be running some offensive plays from fullback will be

EASTERN COACHES.- Head'Coach Joe Mitchum is flanked by assistant Ed Wilson,
·left, and Arch Rose, right.

.....
.,

{,

COLUMBUS (UPi)
Dream Maker, relatively
unknown among racing fans
unllllaslweekend, beat out a
field of 10 classy 3-year-olds
In winning the $30,000 Little
Brown Jug Preview at Scioto
Downs Thursday nlghf.
Dream Maker, third at the
three-quarter pole, came on
strong In the stretch to win by
a head over fast-closing
~usty Omal),a. The winner
covered the mile In 2' 03 3-5
over a track rated slow
following 8 shower earlier In
the evening .
Favore'd Warm Breeze, a
Brei Hanover offspring who
paced to a world record time
of 1 : 5~ ~- 5 on a mile track In
the second heat of the Review
Futurltv at Springfield, Ill.,
earlier ihls season, was third.
The winner, a Race Time
colt owned and trained by
Dick Oldfield of Adrian,
Mich., paid $5.60, $4.00 and
$2.60. Gusty Omaha returned
$17.80 and $3.80 and Warm
8reeie paid $2.20.
bream Maker, driven · by
Glen Garnsey, surprised the
racing world last weekend at
DuQuoin, Ill.. with an Jm.
presslve 1:5&lt;1 3-5 clocking In
whipping a solid J.year-old
Geers Stake field , which
Included Warm Breeze.
Thursday night's race was
a warmup to the famed Little
Brown Jug fo be run at
Delaware, Ohio, later this
month.
f
Oak lawn VIctoria (t) and
Spirit Creek (7) combined for
a nightly double payoff of

l

Darst .reunion enjoyed
Chiid•·en and their !amities
uf the lale Jasper M. Darst
held a reunion Labor Day at
the Forest Acres Park.
' Attending were. Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Darst , Peggy
Anne, Vincent, Mary, ~e
Dee, Misty and Joseph, Mrs.
Linda Darst Haught, Chris
' and Chris tine, Mr. and Mrs.
,Dale ·Darst, Jr., Mike, Kelly,
and lJsa, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Rathburn, Robin,
Bobby, Mark, Chuckle,

Open On Monday
Starting Se pt. 13th

HOURS
9:00-3:00
Phone 992-2725

A crowd of 5,687 wagered

$361.644.

1931b.'senior Mllrk Lawson. Eva!lB and Mills will be protecting
the ends of the line on defense, while Mora and Boston will be
plugging up the middle in the tackle position~. Defensive half·
backs will be Kuhn and Smith, while McClure will be playing
the safety.
With lots of lettermen, good size, and depth this could be
the year oft)Je Green and White. We'll know more afler Friday
nlght.

Eastern High School Football Team
f

ran

$183.20.

.

Sports Briefs
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
By
United
Press · IUPI)
- Damon Coy scored
International
• his fourth victory In eight
outings lhls year with a twolOS ANGELES (UP!) John Cappelletti will start at length win over favored
·Denny at Northfield
fullback and Lawrence Empire
Park ThuMy nigh!.
McCutcheon at halfback in
Slick H II as third.
the Los Angeles Rams '
Damon Coy , driven by
seaso n opener Sunday Ernest Kaufman, covered the
In 2: 11 1-5 over a
against the Atlanta Falcons. mile
"sloppy" track and paid
Rams ' Coach Chuck Knox sa.ao, $3,00 and S2 .&gt;10.
also announced Thursday
The big triple combination
that' 11)-year veteran Tom of 5-0 was worth $162.60.
A crowd of 2,064 wagered
Mack will retijrn as a $227,862
.
',
permanent captain along
with Merlin Olsen.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
- An unidentified bettor
collected $7,190 with a $20
exacta ticket Wednesday
night at Hollywood Park
when longshot Peeping Tom
woo and Brave Spring placed
second in the seventh race
winnil)g combination.
A $5 exacta ticket returned
a whopping $1,790, There
were four $10 tickets and 44 $5
tickets sold
on the
combination. ·

••

th~y

DEAUHELEN:
"Wa]l(lng the Line" should hear my story, but please don't
take It as advice:
II started with my mother. She was·a beautiful woman and
had many lovers, while being a good wife, an excellent
hou.~ekeeper and parent.
My sister has a lovely family, an important career, and tbe
same lover for over 30 years, while remaining happily
married.
r had my first lover at the age of 33 afler 15 years of
marriage. Four more followed; the current one is in his ninth
year, l arn 51, he is 60, If we part, I h9pe to find another.
B&lt;lth my lover. and I lead active community lives, are
upstlmdlng, righteous citizens in every way, respected by
friends, family, and well thought of in our business association
and religious affiliations. No one suspects. He is a good
husband and father. I am a good wife and mother.
My hu.qband is a wonderful man. He is the most important
person in the world wme and I love him dearly , But I need and
want and enjoy another man in my life.
I feel no guilt and I mak-e no excuses. This is right for me.
- NO NAME
.
DEAR HELEN: .
If WTL and her husband reaUy love one another, they can
dl,scu.qs the problem, and if he's liberated enough (few men
:U-e ), he won't feel threatened when she Is attracted to
someone else ~mporarUy. After lill; If she likes ~nis, .;md be
doesn't, would he insist she never agafu touch a tennis racket?
I'd ~sk for her address so we could correspood, but I can just
hear all your readers smirking, "Ah HA!"UEAR HELEN:
I wouldn't jeopardize my (somewhat undersexed)
husband's love just for a fling, so I'll take it out in - ·
DAYDREAMING
DEAR HELEN:
My husband, a very religious, very repressed,.but withall
a wonderful man, became impotent before he was 35, and he
prefers this status, though he's still affectionate.
For 17 years now, I have had two separate compartments
in myself, one labeled "Husband, · Home, Family,
Companlonship, Love;" and tbe other labe,Ied "W3)'111th, Sex,
·and a different love and companionship" - with my lover. I
don't feel promiscuous or even unfaithful, because I'm faithful
tobothmy men. - NEEDED:z.;wo"ausBANDS"

lOS ANGELES (UPI) Tennis star Billie Jean King,
who dropped out of singles
competition last year after
winning her sixth singles
championship at Wimbletoo
will enler two singles tourna:
ments this fall.
" Entering these two

'

Kay's Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd . St.
Middleport,

o.

Richie , Terry, Mrs, Ada
Moron and Dave, Mrs.
Bonnie Coy, Kim, Cindy, and
Billy, David Carr, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Darst, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Davidson, Mfss
Garnett Darst, Miss Uda
Btlggs, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Grate, Jeni Grate, Mrs. Joan
Wells, Jody and Tim, Dano
King, Harold Carson, Mr. and
Mrs. John Davidson and
Walter Davidson.

The fourth a1111ual rewlion
of tile family of the late
Edward Martin and Mary
Frances Blankenship Martin
was held Sunday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Martin, Beaver.
Recognlzed were Joey Ed
Martin and family of Fort
Bragg, N. C. who traveled the
farthest; Angela Martin, 111montlw)ld daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Joey Ed Marlin,
and Mrs. Clara Howery,
Pomerqy, the oldest per!Wn
attending , Mrs. Thomas
Mitchell, Columbus, was
elected president, and Mrs.
Michael Marshall, secretary •
treasurer . Games were
played during the day.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Martin, Doug and
Kathy Martin, Beaver; Mrs.
Robert Roush (Madeline
Martin), Charleston, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Everett See,
Mr. and Mrs. ThomaS Mit.
chell, Mr . and Mrs. Michael

REEDSVILLE · - The
Reedsville I (Rockets) LJttle
League baseball ~am and
their families held a victory
picnic recently at the
Bellville Locks picnic area.
Two cakes, decorated with
the names of the team, were .
presented by Marlene Put.
·man and VIrginia Car~r .
Trophies were · presented to
Bill Durst, Hugh Martin and
Larry Harris, Coaches;
Martba Durst, scorekeeper
and Don Jones, for giving
super help . Individual
trophies were presented each
team memher. A softball
game was enjoyed by aU.
Allending were Mrs. Orva
Jean Holter, Mark and Judy;
Mrs. Doris Williams. and
.Jimmy Wells,.Mr. and Mrs.
"1\obert Larkins, Jerry and .
Roberta; Mrs . Teresa
Coltins, Brian and Angela;
Mrs. Virginla Carter and
Jimmy ; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Jones, Gene , Patty arid
Charles, Mr. ai!d Mrs. Larry
Ha.rris, Larry and Keith;
Mrs . Marlene Putman,
Ricky, Donny and Keith;
Mrs. Donna Connolly, John
and Dale; Mrs . Delores
Foster, Scott; Sara and Sybil;
Mrs. Mary Cowdery and

Party honors
Tom Tobin

HOLIDAY VISITORS
Labor Day weekend guests
of Mrs. Cora Grindley and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Grindley
were Mr. and Mrs. Robin
Lynch and Mr, and Mrs. Jim
Warner, Columbus . Mrs.
Lynch is employed at ,
Ashland OU in Colwnbus and
.her husband is a senior at
Ohio State. Mrs. Warner is
employed at Unlve~ity
A birthday and gotng away
Hospital and her husband, party was held recently in
Jim, is employed at In· honor of Thomas Ray Tobin,
dustrial Nucleonlcs.
18, on SundaY. He is the ~Wn of
Mrs. Bess Hendricks, Mid·
dleport, and the Ia~ Robert
R. Tobin, Sr. Thomas left
early Tuesday to join the U.
S. Navy ·at Great Lakes, ill.
Refreshments were in a
red, whlte and blue color
scheme with a birthday-bon
voyage cake, ice cream and
soft drinks being served by
his 100ther. Al~ndlng were
his sisters, Barbara jo, Terri
'and Tina, and a brother,
Arthur, Larry Hendricks,
Jack Coleman, Rick and
Charlie Smith, Richard Berry
and Beth Vaughan who •
surprised Thomas by laking
him to dinner. Unable to
at~nd the party was Robert
Tobin, Jr.
for all your home

HERE

'I

Entertainment anet
Appliance NOidS

DOXOL

Iron-on decals
can 't be removed

Bv Poltv Cr• mer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Please
!ell me how to remove an
"iron-on" decal from a cottoo
T-ehirt. - JOYCE.
DEAR JOYCE - My a&amp;
ower IJ not good. 1 waa IDformed ·by a maker of ouch
decals thatthe transfer Ink ln
the decals fuses with the
Iabrie to whteh 11 is appUed
and cannot be removed. _
POLLY.

BARITONE THEOOOR Uppman will be the finl
concert of the 197S.77 Tri.COunty. Community Concert
Associatioo. Uppman will perform Saturday, Oct. 9, 8
p.m. at tile Gallla Academy High School auditorium.
Admission to association concerts is by membership only,
Headquarters is loca~ at 16 Stale St., Gallipolis.
'

Larry, Mrs. Dottie Lance,
Mike, Laurie and Usa ; Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Martin,
Michael and Matthew; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Durst, David,
Dennis, Debbie and Dee Dee ;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swain
and C~rl; Terry Reynolds,
Jimmy Randolph, Wilson and
Sherri Putman, Glen and
Mike Putman and Tony and
Carrie Ann Gilllan.

Baritone included
on concert schedule

American baritone
Theodor Uppman will appear
in Gallipolis Saturday, Oct. 9,
8 p.m. at the Gallia Academy
High School auditorium
Under the auspices of the Tri·
County Coinmunlty Concert
Associ a lion.
The concert association
serves Jackson, Meigs,
Mason and Gallla Counties.
BffiTHDAY FETED
The
JOembership drive for
The sixth birthday of
the
197S.77
concert season
Christopher Grindley was
observed recently with a began this week with renewal
party at the home of his of old memberships and will
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger conclude next week with a
Grindley and his grand· new member campaign.
mother, Mrs. Cora Grindley, Akickoff dinner for the new
Mlnersvllle. Attending were inember drive wm be held
Christopher's sisters, Lisa Monday, Sept. 13, 7 P·!" · at
and Lorna, Mr . and Mrs. . Rio Grande College cafeleria .
Other concerts on this
David Watson and ·Dina ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs . season 's schedule ·include
Robin Lynch· of Columbus; The New York Brass Quinlet,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warner, March 16 and pianist Thomas
Colwnbus ; Bill Harris, Rt. 1, Schumacher on April 22.
Uppman, a gil~ luminary
Racine.
of the Metropolitan Opera
and a star of concerts, radio
and ~levision made his debut
at' the Metropolitan Opera in
RUMMAGE SALE SET
"Pelleas et Mellsande" under
There will be a rummage the baton of Pierre Monteux.
sale at St. Paul's , Unl~d Another of his early roles was
Methodist Church annex, that of the whimsical bird
Tuppers PlaiJis,' today and catcher , · Papageno, in
Saturday from 9:30am. to 4 Mozart's "The Magic Flu~, "
pm.
Under the baton of Bruno
Walter .
The success which more
than any other started Upp·
MRS. ROACH UL .
man on the road to fame was
Mrs. Carl (Dorothy ) his appearance in the title
Roach, Wright St., Pomeroy, role of Benjamin Btit~n 's
entered the Holzer Medical opera "Billy Budd" in its
Cen~r and is scheduled to world premier at Covent
undergo surgery today. Her . Garden. It was the highlight
room number is 220A.
of the London 1951·52 season
·
~·
with the London Times ob·
serving, "The Billy Budd of
the American baritone , Mr .
TheOdor
Uppman, was the
Holzer Medical Center
most
conv in c ing
~Discharges, Sept. 9)
Virginia Barrett, Mrs . ma~rializa~on of Melvute's
Frank Beckner and son, ball-drawn character, and his
Walter Carpenter, Anita
Cordell, Denver Cox, Mabel
Day, Luda Durst, Edna Ellis,
Dale Fair, Ernest Gahm,
James Higgins, Anna Kinder,
SON BORN '
Pauline Little, Marilyn
Mr
.
and
Mrs . Daniel
McCartney, John Morgan,
Hensler
of
Racine
are an·
Pauline Moyer, Conrad
nouncing
the
birth
of
a son;
Ohlinger, Mildred Osborne,
Aug.
ll,
at
the
Holzer
Medical
Cena Parsons, Ha.ttie Queen,
Eric Rainey, Flain Ra Iliff, Center. The baby has been
Mrs. Curtis Roush and son, named Kelly Clayton. Mr .
Brenda Smeltzer, Jody and Mrs. Hensler ha ve
Stewart, Benjamin Stumbo, another son, James Clair, a
Pearl Stumbo, Janet Tillis, second grader at the Racine
James Ward, Sandra Waugh, Elementary School. Mr. and
Howard Well, Michelle Mrs. Raymond Hensler,
Wright, Shannon Wyatt, Racine, are the paternal
grandparents , and Mrs .
Magnolia Whittington.
Elaine Harvey, Logan, is the
(Birth, Sept. 9)
ma~rnal grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Rose ,
son, Long Bottom.

TV &amp; Appljilnce
Gas service .
Racine, Ohio
Diester, Ohio

great monologue in the form
of a broadside ballad was
sung with noble str,ength and
· ~nderness . "
·
When "Billy Budd " was
introduced in America in
19~2, he sa~ the lead with the
NBC TV Opera , and in
November, 1970 he again
starred tn the role in the first
professionally staged per·
formance of "Bifly Budd" in
the Uni~d Sta~s with the
Lyric Opera of Chicago.
Admission to . the Uppman
concert and other associa Uon
presentations is by mem·
bership only. The association
headquar~rs are loca~d at
the Gallipolis Chamber of
Commerce office, Gallipolis .

Auxiliary

Be Your Housekeeper

CHESTER - The Ladles
Auxiliary of the fire depart·
men t met Wednesday
evening Sept. 1, at the
' firehouse ,
'President Opal Hollon ,
presiding opened the meeting
with The Lord 's Prayer,
followed by roll. call .
The secretary's report was
read by Ethel Orr and the
treasurer 's report by Opal
Wickham. Committee reports
were given and it was decided
to order Christmas cards for
sale. Plans for the annual
picnic of the firemen and
auxiliary were discussed .
Larry Smith, president of the
fire department, met with the
auxiliary and · thanked them
for their help and donations
for the county fair and asked
for their help for the Lahor
Day barbecue .
Members present were
Opal Hollon, Clara Conroy,
Cleo DeTray , Clarice Allen,
Ethel Orr, Erma Cleland, Joy
Clark, Sheila Taylor, Opal
Wickham, Karla Chevalier,
Margaret Christy and Inzy
Newell.
·

as it cleans

Middleport

Middleport Book Store
Middleport, 0.

For a limited time, with the purchase
of any large 16 oz. soft drink you
can take home a 16 oz. Coca-Cola glass.
· The total price for the larg drink and the glass is only 49c . Start
collecting your set of eight glasses today! (Empty glasses may be
purchased for J9c)

in our dining

fast

BAKER FURNITURE

Verse of Helen Steiner Rice

Take Home A Glass Today

Enjoy your meal

sss

We Feature Inspirational
cards Wrth The

I

Full Size Hoover Upright Cleaner.

It beats
as it sweeps

also "" JliCKO!Q up · wnen
cleaning the tub. - JEAN.
DEAR POLLY - Sa'ews
are often hare! to get tbro!Jih
wood and other surfaces, but
I have found an easy and f88l
way, Before trying to put the
screw in the surface, rub bits
of leftover soap arollhd the .
screw. Use your screwdriver
and find the screw goes in
easier and·ln a jiffy. This also
works with nails. - LINDA Y.
DEAR PoLLY - I make
DEAR POLLy - My Pet four bOles of dusUng powder
Peeve is with the milkers of for less than thirty cents by
pet foods. When one acquires filling empty dll!Ung powder
a new pet, it may take a while boxes with corn starch and
to learn just what foods they tben spraying the con~nts
like. It is necessary to spend a with my favorite spray
couple of dollars on different perfwne. The ''powder" bas
foods they may not eat. It a lovely Odor. -HELEN.
seems the food manufac·
DEAR POLLY - Those
turers could offer sample size who cannot 11fford to buy
packages o( the different expensive porducts to get rid .
foods to be .used 88 a trial, of flies, mo8qultoes and other ·
without wasting money oo a such bugs can just bUy a box ·
Jot of high priceil cana and of mothballs. Place two or
boxes. - MRS. P.S.
three along a window sill in
DEAR POLLY - Do tell each room. U there are
Lula that I keep my suitcases children put the mothballs on
free of mildew or mold by the upper sill. Renew .from
keeping a bar of toilet soap in time to time and you 'II find
each one. Af~r using a case 1 this Is a pretty sure'and cheap
always put in a bar before it way of eliminating such
is stored. I often eyen leave a pests. -OUVINE.
bar of my favori~ brand in
Polly will send you one of
the suitcase when I travel. - her "peachy" thank-you
LOUISE,
. cards, Ideal for framlDg or
DEAR POLLY ~ I of~n placing In your family
'take the children along when scrapbook, U she uses your
I go shopping, so I have made favorite Pointer, Peeve or
a list of the varioua restrooms Problem In her column. Write
and 'comfort · stations Polly's Polnlers In care of
available on quick notice . In thls newsnaiN'r.
many smaller towns the
department stores of~n do
RIVEb1ui MEDICAL
not have such facillties, so a
GROUP
list of bus and gas statioos
Adjocenlfo
arid public buildings that do is
Veterams
always carried in my purse
Memorial
Hospital
as a wise precaution. R. A. AVERtON, M.D.
CLAIRE.
A. G. SOLA, M.D.
DEAR POLLY - Try
JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
putting several of the suction . C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.
cups (used to hold soap) in
ffllce Hours; Hl·12 1.111.
the bottom of your tub or
Mon.-Sat., 2-4 p.m. Mon .·
Fri., 7·8 p.m. Mon., Wed.,
shower as a help to provide
frj
traction, whim ll,etting out of
· 'PHONE 992-33~1. .
the tub or shower . They can

has meetin~

Let 'Hoover'

SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S

If

Polly's Poi'nters

e'

FERTILIZER
FEED
QUA~ITY SEED
HYBRID CORN

NEW YORK (UP!) Johnny Weismilller, Buater
Crabbe, Sergio Oliva and
Boyer Coe will be inducted
into the World Body Bulldlng
Guild's · Ha.ll of Fame In
ceremonies at the WBBG's
Third Annual Testlnionial
Dinner at New York's
Sheraton Hotel, Saturday,
. Sept. 11.
.

Marshall, Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Drown, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Wickline, daughter ,
Debbie, and Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold McDade, Bob, Delina,
Selina and Arnold, Jr., aU of
Colwnblia.
Mr .. and Mrs. Uoyd
Thompson, Bruce and TOdd ,
South Point; Mr. and Mrs.
Osby Martin, Adam and
Patricia, Mr . and Mrs. Leslie
Gibbs, Jim, Brian and Stacy,
Mr. and Mrs . . Edward
Martin, Rick and Jeff, Mrs.
Lydia Hysell, all of Pometoy:
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin
and son, Mike, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Kibble and Brian
Beeler, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Morris and
children, Rt. I, Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Joey
Martin and children, Angela
and Heideki, Fort Bragg, N.
C. ; Mr. and Mrs. Emile
Thomas, Akron ; Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Martin, Jr., Jeff
and Jan, Belpre.

Victory party enjoyed
by Reedsville players

WHERE
DO YOU GET IT?

tournaments does not
represent a commitment to
permanenUy return to singles
competition," stressed King.
"However, my knees seem tc
be in very good shape, I feel
very good now so I decided to
·enter Phoenix and Missioo
Hills to see how I respond.''

reunite

Drive-Thru

Window Service.

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept.IO.l976

morning serv1ce, 9 30 a m, with
pr~hlng on first ond third Sun·
day of month by G~Piclcens.

ship, 7.30 p .m . Prayer mHtlng,

10 a .m.; Pra~er meeting ,
Tt.ursdoy, 7 p.m., Sundoy e11.,mg
service, 7 p .m.
ZION CHURCH Of CHRIST.
Pomeroy-Horr l10nville Rd .. Oorr
Kennedy , pastor, Bill MtEiroy,
Sunde~y
school supt
Sunday
school , 9:30am ; morning wor·
sk1pand communion. 10·30 a m:
Sunday •w•ntrfg youth Ckrittlon
Endeavor, 6 30 p m., worship ser·

9; 30 o m. Preaching MNk:e,
IOA5am NoevenlngMI'Yice.

PRESBYTERIAN vlco, 7 30 p.m. WodnOldoy ovon-

@~Psl!l1s· t() s ()sts ·

SIIVERSVlll E C MMUNITY Bruce Smith, pastor Wallace ner of Second and Andeuon,
CHURCH, Sunday
I Mrvico, Oamowaod, Supt 111M Scloao!, Moson Pastor, Wo!iot Cloud. "'

~~

TRINITY CHURCH. Rov, W H,
Pernn , pastor. Roy Moyer Sun·
day school supt. Church School
9 15 a .m .. WDrlhip service 10.30
a .m. Choir rehearsal. Tuesday
7.30 p m. under direction of Mrs
Paul Nease

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE• Corner Unton ond .
Mulberry , Rev Clyde V Hendet·
ton po•tor Sunday schQOl, 9 30
om , Glen McCiu*Q, 1upt .. morn Ing worship , 10 30 a .m., even ing
service, 7.30. m•d ·week service
Wednesday , 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAl , The Rav

MIDDlEPORT CHURCH Of THE
NAZARENE
Re11 . Don Cole,
pot tor , Mrs. Mary la1hey, Sunday
sthool supt . Sunday Khool , 9 30
a.m
morning worship, 10•30
am :
Sundo~
evongallstic
meeting, 7 30 p m
Pro)ler
m"tmg Wednesday, 70:)0 p .m

UNITED

MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUN TY,
Pw1ght L Zovitz , director.

1ng prayer m.. llng ond B1ble
1t1Jdy, 7.30p.m.

PRESBYTERIAN , ReY
frnest
Stncklln , pastor. Sunday church
school. 9.30 a .m • Mt s ,• Nomer
Lee supt .. mornh,v worship ,

Pme Grove The Rev. Will iam
Middlesworth, Pastor . Church
ser\llces ' :30 a .m. Sunday School

HA R RI S 0 N VI LL E

THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy
Ro~

W. Wmmg offker m charge
Sunda y, lO o.m
Holiness
meeting , 10 30 am , Su nda~
SChool Young People's legion, 7
p m : Thursday , 1 to 3 p m.,
Ladies Home leoglte 7 p m Prep
dasses

•o 30a.m

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP·
liST CHAPEL Route I , ShodtPostor Bobby Elkms. Sunday
schliiOI 5 p .m Sunday worship ,
S.•S p m .. Wednesday prayer ser
vke , 7 30p.m

R ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Corner of Sycamore ond Second
SIS Pomeroy The Rew Wdi1am
Middlesworth Pastor Sunday
School ot 9 ,.5 o m and Chu rch
Serv•ces 1) o m.
· SACRED HEART , ReY Fattier
Paul 0 Welton , pastor. Phone
992·2825 Satu rday evening Man ,
7 30, Sunday Man , 8 and 10 a .m.
Confe~sion , Saturday , 7·7·30p m .

Th e wheels are turn ing .. those mental wheels

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
Of CHRIST , 200 W Moin Sl. , Jarry
Poul . mmiste r, phone 992 7666

and the emot1onal ones

too-that 10 th 1s "com puter age" so lve the equat ions of ro mance.
And like any compu ter the teen-age mind operat es the way 11 has been
program med. Alrea dy he has some firm 1deas abou t g ~rl s. ""d she equal ly ftrm
1deas about bo~s . Each knows the kmd of person he likes. the ktnd of character he
respects. the ktnd of relatwnsh1p he conSiders worth while
. Of cou rse, the Immediate qu est iOn IS whethe r to date . But the deeper ques-

That part of the progra mming, Parent, is largely your responSibility And
only YO UR CHURCH can effect ively share 1t with you'

With the hope it will, in some measure', foster and help sustain that
which is good in family, and community life, this feature is sponsored by
, the business firms and organizations whose names appear below.

KINCSBURY HOME SALES
&amp;SERVICE) I_NC.
THE FINEST IN MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Marn
Pomeroy
Ph 992-7034 '

•

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC:
Ph. 991-2101

WILKINSON'S

John F. Futlz

Pomeroy

,, SMALL ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
4'8 Locust St. Mrddleport Ph 992-3092

RACINE PWMBING &amp; HEATING
" HElL" DEALER
·
Racrne
Ph, 949·2U2

Third St.

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON
Call 949-2831 For an Appointment
Ratrne, Ohio ·

REUTER.S.B_OGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

'
•'

2t4 E. Matn
,7

•..

Pomeroy

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
()pen 8 to 5- Closed Thurs.

Ph. m.mo

Racme, Ohio

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE
Racine
Ph. 949·2550

''

ELLIS &amp;SONS SOHIO

1' Nationwide Ins. Co of Columbus. 0
.•
104 W. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2311

'

BETSY ROSS BAKERY
BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Middleport
Ph. 992-3030

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

BAKERS OF GOODBREAD

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS
992-m5

Pomtr&lt;JY

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT .
"·· "

'¥20

.....

LOUIS W OSBORNE
E. Matn
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2178

.
•

DUDLEY'S
TWO LOCATIONS
39 N. Second 51.
Middleport, 0 .
44 Court St
Galhpohs, 0.

MARK VSTORE

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
WE HANDLE ONLY U.S.D.A. CHOICE
MEATS

..' GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL ,
.r

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DediCated lo the Meigs-Mason Area

Ph. m -3284

Middleport
Phone 992-2156

FRESH PROOUCE &amp; PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

MIDWAY MARKET .l;.~m,:;~~a2
MARKET · PhM:~-~7~~

b£B·s

:.··.,....~, AMERICAN PAINTING

co.

INDUSTRIAL&amp; COMMERCIAL
"'; 446-0963 Addrson, OhiO Ph. 992-6173

.

RUTLAND

FIRS I

BAPTIST

CHURCH-Orewy Gore, supt.
Sunday School , 9.30 a m., mom·
mgworship, 10 45a.m.

THE HILAND CHAPEl. George

Ro lph Zundel , pastor. W11l1am
Watson , Sundov school supt.,
Sunday school, 9.30 o.m. BYF, 6
~p , m., Btble study Wednesday. 7
p m .. cho.r prachce, Wednesday,
8 30p.m

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
2t6 w. Second
Pomeroy
Ph. '1'12·3863

"

~ ~ .ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
1
hi~ cine
Ph. 949-9130

Attend the church of your
choice .
Ph 992-3498
Pom~roy
.

RIQENOUR SUPPLY
Furn1ture &amp; Hardware
Homel1fe Saws

Chesler

. t
i

!
IJ

'

RACINE FOOD MARKET

THE STORE WITHAHEAf\T
fiiCiM
Ph 949-2626

II

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm 's Korner

Kerm1t Walton
Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
C~urch

7 30p.m

Robert T. Bumgarner,
Dtre&lt;:tor
POMfROYCLUSTER
Rev . Robert Hayden

Miles Trout
posJor. Sunday
school. 10a .m .. Steve little, supt.
Evening serv1ce , 7 p m. : prayer
matting, Thursday, 7p m

SilVER RUN FREE B"'PTIST,

Rev Jome1 Corbitt

CHESTER

and offi ce su ppl 1es-

gtfls
99 Mill Sl

630pm
ENTERPRISE, Worshtp 9 o m

730 p.m,
1-"'NGSVILW: CHRISTIAN CHUR·

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE

SYRACUSE ClUSTER

faSi tng Tuasday ,

Roger R1ebel
Ray Riggs
St. Rl 1
Chester
Ph, ?15-4100

10 am .

FOfiEST RUN, Wo.-.h•p 9 am
Church SchooiiOa.m .
MINERSVILLE , Worship 10 am
Churt h School9 a.m
SYRACUSE. Chruch School 9·30
a .m. Worsh1p service 7.30p m.

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Timothy Sm1th
Cluster Leader
Rev Steven W1lson
Assoc1ate
BETHANY , (Dorcas), Wors.tup
9 30 a m . Church School 10 30
om
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30
a.m Wor5h1p JO 30 o m. 2nd and

11 am. : Sunday night service5
Chrilfton Endeovor 7:30 p m ..
Song servtt e , 8 p.m Preach~ng
8·30 p m. M1dweek Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7 p m : Roy
Adoms , loy leoder

4th Sundays

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,

APPLE GROVE Sunday School
9 30om Worsk1p 7·30 p m, 1st

lst, 2nd , 3rd Sundays, 930 a .m

nigt.tprayerservice, 730p m

Dexter Rd , langsvtlle Ohto, Rav
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor. Sunday
School 11
o.m
Saturday
preochmg servKes 7 30 p.m
Wodnesdoy evening Btble aludy
ot7 30p m

sh1p 2nd Sunday 7~30 p m . .fth
Sunday 9 ·30o m : Prayer m&amp;etlng
W&amp;dnesday 7·30 p m UMW ht
Tuesday 7 ~p m.

Roger Watson, pastor Jess1e
Wh1te, Sunday schoolsupl Morn·
1ng worship , 9 ~ a .m , Sun·
doyschool , 10 ~ a .m , evemng

Bailey Run Rood, Rev Emmett
Rowson , pottOr Handley Dunn
supt Sunday sthCKll, 10 a.m Sun
day eventng serv1te 7 30. Bible
leoth1ng 7 30 p.m. Thursday

Btble Study Thursday 1 p m Choir
Practice Thundoy8 p . m.

8rown , supply pastor; Sunday
school9 AS a .m , Sunday e\len1ng

.Cth Sunday 9·15 om Worsh1p
lst, 2nd . 3rd Sundays 9 15 o m .,
AthSundoy7 30p m
MORNING STAR, Worsh1p 9 30
am , Church S&lt;ihool 10 30 a .m ..
Mtd Week Service Wednesday 8

CHURCH , Eugene Underwood ,
pastor, Howard Coldwell Jr ..
Sunda{ S&lt;:hool Supt .. Sunday
Schoo , 9 30 a.m : Morning Ser·
mon . 10:30 am , Sunday even
ing serv1ce 7 p m

pm
MO!tSE CHAPEL , Worshp 11

lEI ART f"'LtS UNITED
BI!ETHREN. Rev Froe!ond Noms ,

a .m ' Church School9·30a m
PORTLAND, Worship 7 •30 p m .
Church School9lla m .

pastor, Floyd Noms, supt Sundoy
school , 9 30 o m , morn1ng ser· •
man, 10.30 a.m .. Prayer service ,

10 30a m.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
ReY . Richard Thomas
Pastor
DuaneSydenstrtclcer
John Douglas
Auoc1ot&amp;s
JOPPA, Worshtp 10 am, Chur·
ch Sckool 9 a m , Prayer Meeting

PROPHECY f G P Smith , pa1tor
Sunday Sct.ool, 10 a m. 1 Arthur
Henson , Supt ; Morning Worship ,
11 am , Young Peoples servtce,
7 p m , Eventng serv1ce, 7 30
p rTJ
Wednesday Mld·Week
Prayer S.rvtce , 7 30 p .m. , Youth
m"t1ng , 6:30pm Evening war·
shtp, 7 30 p.m.

Wadnesdoy Bp.m.
lONG BOttOM. Sunday school

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev. Herbert Grbro.

at 9 30 om . Worah1p servtcH at
1 30 p.m . Bible study and Youth
meellng at 8 p . m
on
Wednesdays.

pastor Warship service, 11 a .m
and 7·30 p.m Sunda~
Sunday
School , 9·30 a .m R1chord Barton,
sup f
Prayer
meeting ,

NORTH BETHEL. Worshtp 11
om :ChurchSchool10o m

Wednosdoy, 7.30p m.
BRADFORD CHURCH

ALFRED Sunday School 9 30
am, Worship 10 _.5 o.m., Prayer
meet ing WednHdoy 7 ~5 p m.,
UMW3rdTuesday8p .m
REEOSVILLf. Sunday School9·30

CHRIST , Jock Perry minister Sun·
day St hool 9 30 am. , mormn9
church 10.30 om ; Sunday a\len ·
tng
servic11,
7 •30
p.m
Wednesday service 8 p m

pm
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER.

CH , Roger C. Turner. paStor
• Sunday school. 9 30 a m , Sunday
morn~ng worshtp, 10.30, Sunday
@venmg servtee, 7 30.
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy Envoy
and Mrs Ray Wining, oHkers m
charge. Sunday haltness meeting
10 am , Sunday school, 10 30
o.m Leader YPSM Eloise Adorns
7·30 p m
sol\lat1on m"tlng
Lad ie s Home league 12 noon to 2
p m , Thursday; prayer mHtlng
ond Bible study, Thursday, 7.30
p.m .

MIDDLEPORT
MT MORI"'H MPTIST, Corner
Fourth and Mo1n Middleport ,
Rev. Henry Key , Jr pastor Sun
day School 9 ·30 a m , Mrs Ervm
Baumgardner , sup! : Morn.ng
worship 10 ·~5 am .'

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES. Lorry
Carnohon
pres1dlng min1ster
Sunday Bible lecture, 9:30 a .m.
Watthtower study, 10 30 a .m ..
Tuesday, 81ble study, 7 30 p.m
Thur~day ministry Sthool, 7•30
p. m , service meeting 8·30 p.m.

MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,

p.m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,

Rac.l ne Ro ute 2, the Rev James
M Munc~ pasto r Su nday school
9 · ~5 o m ; morn1ng worshtp , 11
o m
evenmg wonh1p, 7 30
Preyer meehng, Tuesday, 7.30
p.m., Young peoples meetmg

EAST LETART, Chruch School

Wednesday. 7 30 p.m : Saturdoy

Fourth Sundoy 10 30 a.m . Wor

HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,

WESLEYAN (Roc.na). Sunday servteo 7.30. Wodnosdoy Bible
Schoof 10om. Worsh1p 11 am..

Study. 7 I30p m.

30 p m Thurldoy.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST,

Corner Sudh and Palmer , the Rev
Peter Granda!, postor; Danny
Thompson superintendent Sun·

doy School. WMPO Rodto pro·
gram 7 "5 a .m , Sunday School,
, ,, 9 15 a .m , Mormng Worship
10 IS am Youth achvll les and
fellowship for .Jun tor and 181'1ior
h1gh students. 6 p.m. Sunday
evenmg worship, 7:30 p m Mid·
week
proyer
urvt Cttl ,
Wednesdoy , 7·30p m
dleport 5th and Ma \n . George
Gloze, mtmst•r, James Sheels
supenntehdent. Bibte school, 9·30
o m , morning worship, 10 30
o m . evenmg worship , 7 30
prayer se rvtce
7 p m
Wednesday

MT UNION BAPTIST, Rav R 0.

lETART FALlS. Church School
tsr. 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10 15om

worshtp, 7 30p m
TUPPERS PlAINS CHRISTIAN

SUTTON, Church School 9 30 · Wed~doy . 7.30p.m.
o m Wonhtp hi ond 3rd Sundoys
'HESHIRE CHURCH OF GOD OF

Of

a m Worshtp 7 30 p m , Proyer
LAUREl CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Meellng 7·30 p m Tuesday CHURCH, Rev Floyd F Shook ,
Visitotlon7 30p m 1st Thursday
SILVER RIDGE , Worship 10 o.rn.
Ckurth Schoo19 o m
TUPPERS ,PLAINS , Worsh1p 9
o m ChurchSchool10a .m

pastor, lloyd Wright, Sunday
School Supt , Mornmg Wonhlp
9 30 a .m .. Sunday School 10 20
am , Wednetday Prayer and Bl ·
ble Slud';' 7·30 p.m . ; Sundo';'

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, avonlng worship 7 30 p m , Choir
George Fredemk , sup! Str\IICe

Procllce Thursday , 7 p m

weekly, 9 30 am. on Sundoy
Preathlng first ond third Sundays
of month by CI1Hord Sm1tk, 9•30
am

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION.
Dorrell Ooddrill, postar Sunday

School,

9:30 o m..

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
1

Charlts Runell , Sr., minister,
R1ck Motomber, supt , S~Jndav
school, 9 30 a .m .. worship ser·

vice

10 30 o.m. Btb!o Study,

Tuea.day, 7 30p m

Leonard

REORGANIZED CHURCH_ OF

G•lmore , ftrst elder: evening aer
v1ce. 7•30 p.m
Wednesday
prayer meeting 730 p .m

JESUS CHRIST OF LATIER DAY
SAINTS Portland Racine Rood
Wlll1am Routh pastor o.nny

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO, Evans, Sundoy School Dlroctor,
Rac1ne Route 2 The Rev Charles
Hand , pastor Sunday school 9 ~5
am , mornu'1g worship , 11 om .
Evenmg servtce\ Tuesday and
Fr1doy 7 30 p m

Paul

Nev1lle,

7.30p.m

'

p .m.

Dudding laM, Mason . W. Va. '"'
Cheater TennaM, Poetor. Sunday
School9 d o.m.: Children's Church ""' p m. Young People'• Ser·
vice 6:45 p.m . Evangelistic S.r·

•
•
'
•
:

Bald Knob . R•v. E. J Griffllh,
supt. of church: Rev. l lt.
Glueaancomp , pastor; Roger

slonary Council 10 a .m . firs! and "" •
third luHdays. Pray•r ond Bible "':
Study, Wadne.day, 7:30p.m
••

po11or Sundoy School 9 30 o.m ,

Morning ••~Ice, 10.30 a .m. ,
youth ••r¥1ce , 6 .-CS p.m.
bongellshc "rv lc:e 7.30 p .m.
Prayer meeting. Thunday, 7.30

CHARLE.V~

Sunday School , 9 30 a .m . : Morn·
tng worsj-11p, 10 30 a.rp. , Sunday
evenm~
ter'Yice 7 p.m.
Wednesday ev•nlng pra~er ser·
v1tes 1 30 p .m

BEARWALlOW RIDGE CHURCH

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev Earl

OF CHRIST \ ( •'l ug Seaman ,
1rHn1ster B1ble ~tv.Jy , 9·30 am:
morn1ng wonh1p , 10 30 o m ;
even1ng worsh1p
7 30 p m.

Shuler, pastor Worshtp serv1ce
930 am Sunday school , 10 30
a m Bible Study and pra,yer ..,.
vice Thursday, 7 30 p .m

Wednesday ltb!ostudy, 7:30p.m .
KENO CHUIICH OF CHRIST,

CARLETON CHURCH ~tngsbury
Rood Gory King . pastor. Sunday

Geot'ge Fr-.r~ck , supt Sunday

school 9 30 am i eventng wor·

News 3,. ,1.1: At!C News 13; Andy GriHIIh 6,
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrascolendas 33.
7·DO-Truth or Cons.l; To Telllhe Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 I ; News 10; Don Adams
Screen Test 13; Family Affair 15; Woman 20; Black
Perspective ont he News 33.
7.30-Porter Wagoner 3; SoapbO~ 4, City by the River
6; MacNeil -Lehrer 20,33; $25,000 Pyramid 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Pop! Goes the C.ountry 15.
S·DO-NBC Smllln' Saturday Morn ing Parade 3,4,15;
ABC's Saturday Sneak Peek 6, 13; Everybody Rides
the Carousel 8, TO; Washington Week In Review
20,33
8·30-Sanford &amp; Soh 3,4,15; Walt Street WHk 20,33

~ · »-NBC

MASON ASSEMI!. Y OF GOD, :

FREEDOM GOSI'EL MISSION ot viet 7:30 p.m. Womon's Mls· ,

\

meeting Tuesday, 7.30 p m. ; William Campbell , pastor SundCJ)'; !
youth meeting, 6 p m. Sunday. School, 9·30 a .m : James Hughes , •
~eoders Ado Von Meter ond Gret· supt., even ing s•rvlce , 7:30p.m.
Ia Suttle, Sunday evening wor· Wednesday evening proy tr
skip, 7 p.m . through winter man· mMtlng , 7:30pm Youth prayer
lht .
service .ach Tuetday

!

ANOTHER
MINUTe OR
::;o AND we
COULD BE'
AIII:SOII:NE!

MT , HERMON CHURCH Of THE
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ,
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST, Lotorl, W. Vo .. Rr. !, Rov Gourgo

FOR ~EAYEN '5
SAKE- , EA5Y--

WIN At BRIDGE
East-South in tug-of-war

WHAT DO YOU
CAL.L THAT·- A

CAL.M DOWN~

TRANQUILIZER
~

NO RTH

¥ 10 7 3

me&lt;~llng ,

+ J84

to A K 10 8

o.m and 7 30 p m, Wednesday
evening Bible ttudy , 7 30 p m

INDEPENDENTHOLINESS CHUR·

CH. INC . - Corner Fourtt. and
Ltncoln St1.. Midd leport, Rev .

!

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb
of Colwnbus spent Labor Day
with her aunt, Mrs. Hazel
Carnahan and Mr. Russell
Radcliffe of Syracuse visited
them m the afternoon.
Mr. ami Mrs. Delbert
Walker and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Gawthrop and children
of Summersville, W. Va.
spent the weekend with their
mother, Mrs. Don Walker.
Rev . Don Walker, Mr .
Henry Roush and Mr. and
Mrs. Linley Hart left Thurs~Y and spent over Labor
Day with Mr. and Mrs. John
Fisher at Marblehead and
spent some time fishing m
Lake Erie.
Mrs Wiley Ours underwent
at
Veterans
surgery
Memorial Hospital.

son , ~onday School s upefinten· :::dent Sunday school , 9·30 a .m ..
evening wonhlp, 1 30 p m..
prayer and pral1e ser\lke , "
Wednesday, 1 30 p m

•J 10963

+7 5 3

iiaJ'RI:~~IIE

I'M B!:HI\lb t{OIJ

1\llll~tJb 1\lfo.T \WoW!

Wlllb lD Dl~ ...

'-----

1

"' ' 4
North·South
vulnerable
West

Nortlt Eut

Pass
Pass

IN T 2 +
Pass Pas.~

gospel.

another club. Lo and behold
East , who had dropped the
jack on the first club, played
the queen this lime and South
was tn busmess
He led the good 10 of clubs
East made his best play by
rufling with the 10 of trumps
and South carefully underruffed This left East on lead w1th
the last d1amond and the jackSIX of spades. South held the
queen of hearts and queeneight of spades while North
held a spade, heart and club
If East led a trump, South
would just take the last three
tricks. If he ted the last diamond. South would d1scard his
htgh heart, ruff m dummy and
clatm

~~~

Opemng lead - 9 +

1

A Pennsylvania reader
wants to know 1f we overcall a
By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
East's \W&lt;Hilamond over- spa de ·opening With two
call on a four-&lt;:ard suit is hearts Your hand ts.
.93 YAKJ64 tK93.864
rather unusual. bu t he JUSt
•
Both
sides are vulnerable
hated to pass w1th h1s fme
'
We
recommend a pass since
hand
there
IS too much danger of
South reb1d to two spades
mt.o real trouble. Still ,
running
and played 1the hand there.
1f
you
like
to-live dangerously
ANNIE- SEEING IS RELIEVING
East cashed three diamonds
a
two-heart
overcallts not the
------"";==- ;-;;====;;-;==~~~~and then played ace and deuce
worst bid ever made
MAVBEIFI
fh t
LET HiM SEE
O ear S
(Do you ha •e a qu6stlon
YOU --IT wou~~L~D. _J ''\"r11oy~c.E The hand looked like a cmch
for
!he eKperts? Wnle "As I&lt;
00 HIM c;
SeT for the rest of the tricks, but
BliCK · South got a rude shock when Jhe Ja cobys " care of thrs
West showed out on the lead of newspaper The Jacobys wilt
the ace of spades Now South answer rnd1v1duaf quest1ons
had to try to hnd a way to 11 stamped, self-addressed
collect e1ghl trtcks He envelopes are enclosed The
entered dummy with a club most mterest,ng questions
and led a spade East's nine wtll be used m thts column
and w•tl rece1ve cop195 of
forced South 's kmg
Ba ck to dumm y w1th JACOBY MODERN I

'

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Pastor Otnnis Bolts Sunday '
School, 10 a.m , wonhip se r~ tce
11.30 o.m and 7.30 p m Prayer
meeting , Wedneadoy , 7 30 p m
HYSELL RUN FREE METHOD IST,
Rev . Herbert Atllng poslor, Sun
day School 9.30 am. morning ,
service, 10 30; youth service , 6 45
p m ; evangelistic ser\llce . 1 30 1
p m Prayer meeting , Thur•day ,
7 30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLI C CHURCH -:,
OF JESUS CHRIST, Thomas L. t 1
Holmea., pastor. Bible study , ~~
Soturdav 7.30 p.m .. E"' cmgeli1 t1c p.m ., prayer meehng Tu esday
7 ·30 p m : Bible Study. Thursday ,.,:.
7 ·30 p m
..
:

...

The family of Mr and Mrs. :
Arthur Atherton had a streak :
of hard luck recently Their :
son, Clarence, of Long Bot. ;
tom had a faUmg tree strike
his car while driving to work
and badly damaged his car.
And the grandson , Larry
Atherton in the service In a',
southern state, was stung by ,
a scorpion and hospttallzed.
Painting of roofs and other
types of home painting and
repair are the order of the
day in this vtcinlty at the
present Ume.
'
Sunday dinner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Clare nce '
Henderson were Mr and '
Mrs. Dave Williams and
Aaron of Belpre. Lab or Day
VIsitor at the Henderson
home WM her s1ster, Bertha ;
Wright, of Zanesville.

+ AKQ 10

¥ K QJ

'
'

Mrs. Gene Hudson visited
her mother at Manchester,
Ohio over the weekend.
Mr. Hetu'y Roush and son,
Mr. Dale Roush visited Mr.
and Mrs. David Roush and
children in Colwnbus and
attended the Slate Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Weaver :
of Middletown spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth
Turley and sons spent Sunday ,,
with his mother in Gallipolis .'
and visited his father, Mr. ;
Clarence,Turley, a patient In '
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Miller
and daughter of Arm a, Ohio
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George '
Neigler. Mrs . Frankie
Neigler was a dinner guest
Sunday.
Mr. Kenneth Swart of
Akron spent over Labor Day
weekend with his mother, '
Mrs. James Swart and the
AHred Crow family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wolfe and
family of Jackson and Mr
and Mrs. Gle!lfoy Wolle and
son of Strongville spent Labor
Day ,weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Dory Wolle.

¥A2

toAKQ8 7

BORN LOSER

1

Alfred .., Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on Sept. 5 was 37 and the
offering $28.25. Worship
services were held at 10 : ~
with the Rev . Richard
Thomas speaking from
Nehemiah 4:U and I Cor.
3:8-15 on " Partnership With
God." Communion was observed. Attendance was 26.
Alfred's
annual
homecoming will be held
Sunday, Sept. 19 wllh the
,USUIII forenoon services,
dinner a t12 : 30 and afternoon
program beginning at 1:30.
Fea lures will include Rev .
Bishman and members of the
"Rivers of Ufe" mmistry
from Central Ave. Church in
Athens and other visiting and
local talent . Everyone is
· invited.
Attending the Riverboat
Festival and services at the
Pomeroy landing on Tuesday
evemng from here were
Thelma Henderson, Nina
Robinson, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Pullins.
The UMW wiU hold regular
meeting at the church here on
Tllesd~y, Sept, 21, 8 p. rn.
with a potluck lunch to be
served in the basemen't
during ~ social hour.
The Clair Follrod family
and Nma Robinson and Clara
Follrod visited their uncle,
John Follrod, at Mt. Sterling
Sunday, Sept. 5.
Recent guests of Genevieve
Guthrie have been her
daughter, Muine Yost Bod
Ella Yost of Sucar Grove and
her sister-in-law, Mildred
Story of Columbus.

· -

•QJ
SOUTH !D)

Racine Social Events

~arpnack.

EAST

+ 962
to 96532

O'Doll Monloy , poslor , Sony Hud• "

Court Sts , third ll oor over
L1ghthouu ll:estauro nl
Hitnry
Cook, pastor , Sunday sc hoo l, 10
a .m , morning worship , II om. ,
e 'Y en t ng service
7 30
Wednesday evenmg se rvlte ,
7 :.30. Interdenominational fu ll

WEST
¥9 8654

Soturdoy, 7 p m,
THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH OF
RUTlAND COMMUNITY CHUR· POMEROY - Corner Mom and

CH, Sunday School , 9 30 a .m.,
worshi p ser\ll te,
II a m.,
Wednesday prayer meetlnv. 7.30
p.m ~outh servkes , Sunday, 1
p.m.: Sundoynightworshlp, 7 :30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
N~ARENE , R•v•lloyd D Grimm,
Jr ., pastor Sunday school , 9~ 30
om , worship service , 10 30om
Broadcast live over WMPO ' young
people s
service ,
6 45 ,
evongehsht service, 7,30 p.ll't,
Prayer meeting , Wednesday , 7.30
p,m. Mtss1onary meeting , 7 30
p m ftrstWednvsdayofmonth
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second
and Pome(oy" Sts , Stan Crolg,
pastor Sunday school , 9 "5o m,
wors h1p servtce, 11 a m tratn ing
umon, 6 30 p.m , evenlf!g wor·
sk1p serv1te, 7 30 p.m M1d Week
prayer servtc• . Wed nesday, 7.30
pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST P
0 Bo" 487, M11ler St , Mason . W
Va Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m
Wo rsh1p 11 a m and 7 p m Bible

10

• s42

p m Wednesday , Alfred Wolfe. Second, Middieport, paslor , Cur· ':
lay leader
tis Stephen. Church school , 9.30 -1
WHITE'S CHAPEL , Coolville RO om , preo&lt;hing services 10 30- •

By Mrs. Fraocls Morris
Mr. 81ld Mrs. J,ack Sharp.
nack and son Jackie of
COiwnbus spent a couple of
UNJH D f"'ITH NON ·
DENOMINATIONAL, Rev. Robert days with their parents, Mr.
Sm tth pastor Sunday School , 81ld Mrs. JaCk Sharpnack Md
9 30 a m Class leader. leo H1ll , Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Proffitt .
worsht p servtce 10·30 am · c.hur·
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Baker
ch 7 30 p .m
81ld
Miss Marabelle SharpEDEN UNITED BI!ETHREN IN
CHRI$T, Elden R Bloke, pastor. nack of Columbus spent
Sunday School 10 a m ., Howard Sultday with their parents,
McCoy, supl., Morning sermon , Mr.
Jack
and
Mrs.

and 3rd Sundo~s . Prayer meellng
Wednesday 7 30 p m . Fellowsh1p
supper ftrst Saturdoy6 p.m. UMW
2ndTuesday730p.m .

CHURCH OF CHRIST. Mtd·

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

CHURCHOF GOD.

Loc.oted ot Rutland on New Lima
Rood , next to Forest Atre Pork ,
R~tv Roy Rouse , poster, Robert
Mun;er Sunday Schoolsupt. SUn·
day school , 10 30 a.m .. worship
7 30
p m 6ib l v
Study .

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 282
Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy, Paul J
Wh 1te , Pastor. (;ory Basham Sun·
doy school supt Sunday school ,
9 30 o m , mornmg worship,
10 30, evenmg worsh1p , 6 30 p m
M1dweek prayer serv1te, 7 30

7

'"

COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH

M1dweek
prayer · nrv1ce ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p rtl . , men 's
prayer meehng, Saturday, 7 p .m .,
m1ss1onary me8tlng
second
WednHdoy , 7 30p m.

Mulberry Heights Road , Pomeroy
Pastor, Gerard Seton, Sabbath
School Supenntendenl , Claro
Mcintyre Sabbath Sc.kool , Sotur·
doy afternoon ot 2·00 w1th Wor·
s h1p Service follow1ng ot 3 15

Lowrance Manley , pastor, Mrs
Russell Young Sunday School
Supt . Sunda~ Scltuol 9:30 am
hentng
w o rshi p .
7 30
Wedne~day prayer meettng. 7 30

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Ph. 985-3308

DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev
Lelon Glasure, postor Sunday
Sc hool 1 9 30 am.: youth and
tuntor youth service , 6 AS p m ,
evening worsklp , 1 30 p m ,
prayer and praise, Wednesday ,

Rev R~thord E. Jorv1s
ASBURY, Worship 11 am Chu rck School 9·50 am UMW f.rst
Tuesday Btblt Study Thurs 7 30
pm

ADVENTIST ,

OYESV!LLE COMMUNITY CHUR

HEINER'S BAKERY
Huntington, W. Va

TIST Comer Ash and Plum . Noel
Herrman. pastor Saturday even
tng serv1ce 7•30 p m.; Sunday
School , 10 am ; Sunday tvening
worsh1p, 1 30 p m
MEIGS

Preocktng 9 30 0 m , f1nt and Se·
cond Sundays of each month ,
thtrd and fourth Sundays each
mon th , worsh ip servtce a t 7 30
p m Wednesday evemngs at
7 30 Prayer ond B1ble Study

THE SALVATION ARMY. !IS
'

MIODLEPORT FREEWILl BAP· ing Sib o study 7·30.

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Jr UMYF Wednasdoy 3 30 p m.

COMPLE TE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sls.Mtddleport Ph. 992-9921

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

lh1rd Ave the Rtv Willia m K111t~
ttl, postor Ronald Dugan , Sun ·
day School Supt Cloues for all
ages, evening service, 7 30, 81ble
study , WednesdaY. 7 30 p m..
youth services Friday, 7 30 p .m

NAZARENE, Rev, Dale Bon ,
postor, Bob Moore, Sunday
School supt , Sunday school
don&amp;i tor all ages. 9 30 am ..
mormng worsh1p , 10:.45 a .m.:
NYPS , 6 30 p m., evangel1strc ser·
vice, 7 30 p m Prayer and

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Rev

'

PENTECOSTAL ,

Rev Robert Bumgomer
HEA. TH , Rober t Bumgarner,
Pastor Worship 10 30 o m Chur·
chSchool9.30a m UMYF6p.m
RUTLAND , Wi lbur H1lt , Pastor
Wonh1p 10 30 a m. Church School
9.30o m.

SEVENTH-DAY

Rev

man , po sto~; Sunday Sc.hool , 9 30 Rev . Rav OHler, pastor. s~,~nday
am ; Gerold Wells, supt Morn- tchool 9 30 a .m., worsh1p service,
lng wonh1p , 10 30 o .m . Sunday 10.30 a.m. Bible study ond ptoyor
,venlng worship , 7.30, Prayer service, Wednesday , 7.30p.m.
mooring, Wednesday , ? lO p m
RUTlAND
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Oon l.
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Walk er, Pastor, Ronnie Salser , Carl Peak , pastor; Bill Brown,
Su nday school t upt.. Sunday Sunday school supt
Sunday
1chool. 9 30 a m.. morning wor· school, 9,30 a .m , worship a nd
ship, 10 ~0 am., s~,~nday even ing commumon , 10 30 a m Evening
worshir. , 7 30 Wednesday e\l&amp;n· service, 7 30 p m Regular board

Near Long Bottom , Edsel Hart,
pastor. Sunday school , 10 o m
Ch urch , 7 30 p m .; prayer
meallng 7 30p m thursday

CH Ted Jones pastor Sunday
sthool , 9 30 am. : Roy S1gman ,
sup! mornmg worship 10 30;
Sunday evenmg service, 7·30.
m1d week serv1ce. Wedntsdoy ,
7 30 p m

7 30p m

Middleport, OhiO
.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev John A. Cofl·

ChurchSchool10a .m .
ROCK SPRINGS Worshtp 10
a m Church School 9.1So m
UMYF 6 30 p m
FLATWOODS. Worsh1p . 11 o m
Churth SchoollOa .m

Costa, pa5tor . Sunday Schoot.
q,30 a .m · evenmg worsh1p , 7·30
Thursday evelling prayer service ,

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

p.m

CtiURCH , Rev Ralrh Sm ti h
pastor Sunday schoo , 9·30 a .m .
Mrs. Worley Fronds , supenn ten
dent. Preochm g serv tces first &amp;
thtrd Sunday-s follow1ng Sundoy

School
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST

CHURCH ,

FILE LISTS NO

Rev. Jam•• H. Leach , pastor Sun· Hotchar, pastor, Sunday Sc hool
day school , 9 :30 a m.. Ru11tll 9:30 a m Prayer ond B•Lie study :
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Spencer, sup t , Worsh ip service, 7:30pm Cottage Prayer Servk • . ,
Freeland Norrr1, po1tor. Sunday lO 45 am .: Evening wonhlp Tuesday , 10 am . Worship Ser~ •
school 10 a m, Church service. 7 alternating with C E ot 7·30 p m vice, Thursday, 7·30p .m.
-:
p m . Wedne1doy Bible Study , 7 an Sunday Prayer mtollng, 7•30
CAt V"'RV BIBlE CHURCH 26 N. •

Re v Bobbf Porter, pastor Sun·
do~ schoo , 9 ~ o.m
wonh1p
servtce , 11 a m , evenmg service,
7,30, youth serv1ce , Wednesday ,

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN

tiOn , of sen,ous concern to their parents and to their own future: "' hat standard s

King, Sunday school svpt Sunday
1chool . 9 30 am : wonhip atr·
viet, 10·30 am,. Sunday ltr·
vices , 7 p.m. , youth m.. ting ,
Wednesday , 7 p m.

CHEST£R. Worship 9·1 5 o m
Church School lOam
POMEROY, Worship , 10 30om
Church S&lt;:hoal 9 30 am. UMYF"

Conservat•ve, non Instrumental,
Sundov worship, 10 o rn , 81ble
study 11 a .m , wors htp , 6 p m
Wednesday 81ble study, 7 p .m

wha J prwcJples , what co nv1c trons wdl they brmg w1t h them on a date?

BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST, ~ lm Colo, poster. Kovln

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH

MIDDLEPORT

HYSElL RUN FREE METHODIST

Television log for easy viewing

TRACY, OUR

Sundoy school 9 ·~5 a .m .. wortf11p •
11 am . and 7:30p.m. •
Wookly llblo lludy, Wednotdoy. ,!

~ ..,...tee ,

ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Wlllfrod, Sr.. Sundoy School supl.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST _.;
Sundoy School, 9 30 o rn .: prayor IN CHRISTIAN UNION Tho Rev, •

10:30
Harold Deeth , rector. Church ser
MIDDLEPOfiT, Sundoy school,
vkas, 10 30 a m , Holy commu·
nion first Sunday of 1monlh; chur · q:30a m .. Richard Vaughan , supt
ch school , 10 30 a .m for nursery Morn1ng worship , 10 30
SYRACUSE, Matn lng worship, 9
through 12.
POMEROY CHURCHOF CHRIST am Sundapchool, lOam Mrs
R1ctlard Evanson , postor , Bible Sampson Hall , supt
RUTlAND CHURCH Of GOD,
school, 9 30 om , wors htp , 10 30
am . odult worsh ip service end Rev Jame1 D. Guynn , pastor
young peoples meeting , 7 30 Sunday ~ehool , 10 a .m , Sunday
p m. Com bined B1ble st ud y and worship , 11 a .m .. Sunday evening
prayer meehng Wednesday. 7 30 service, 7 p m f WedneSday wo r
sh;p •ecvlco 7.30p.m
p ,m.

Sunday
1sa1ah
35 1·10
Monday
luke
15 1·10
Tuesday
luke
15 11 -32
Wednesday
II Samuel
12 f-14
Thursday
II K1ngs .
7 3-1 1
Friday II Chrontcles
7 12·22'
Saturday
II Chrontcles
36 11-21

Study Wedn..doy 7 p .m .. Vocal

Wodnoodoy, 7:30p.m.
m111lc.
lONG IOTTOM CHIUSTIAN.
FMST SOUTHDN.BAPTIST. Cor· :_

~~~VJetl

by ~· •oMAS JOSEPH .

ACROSS
31 Gilbert and
1 Conquer
- Islands
5 Rags-to38 Opera
riches
highlight
author
31 Splinter
11 Better than 441 Breakwater
never
U Candle
11 Indisposed C2 Spirit lamp

DOWN

to
12 Gunther
subject
13 Of the
VU'gin
Mary
14 State of

t

---~.-::--:--:--:--.. 7-:-:
N-:-in-a-:,7h-e_m_a_n..--:----~;-;-::;--:--~;;--.-::-:

Nina.

what
are

ljOU

doinq
,1.\.Yl':fl

%Reooir's

support
3 Symbol of
courage

:::Y 4

Swamp
II Saul's
grandlather

5 - -garde
I Celtic
deity
7 Endure

17 Sprite
18 Ending for
exist

( 4 wds.)
8 Perfwne

19 Chemistry I
SuffiX

a Second
hand
Quechuan
Indian
Station
West
Pointer

Yesterday't Auwer

Edwards

~"!~e

~~C u

i5 a fraud!

1 Director, -

9 Spiritual
resort

u set

right
U Sole

supports
Zl - sauce
22 "- the
master
ol my
fate "
(2 wds.)

!3 Most
profound
%4 Dickens
heroine
Z5 Spy talk
%7 Conceal
U Snake
31 Foreigner
32 Jeweled
headband
3'1 - had It!
38 Rarlliii'V

:-+-+-+-

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cR-NO-ITI3 10 A PERSDrVAL.
:::&gt;nr::- U-C~C4-M- __.1"LI'L.. ABNER AND
tf?oa.e 71/ffli%8
ITS-t:=R-MORE
~
time in
PERSONAL.
7?1af2Paris

r

w~

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ml&lt;id Ma

.

r·/J
f!Y

'

33.

11 :30-Johnny CarlOn M,15; Rookies 6.13; U.S. 0P.tn
Tennis Highlights I ; Mary Hartman 10; ABC NeWII
33.
1us-Movie "The Disorderly Ot-dorly" 1.
12 :DO-Movto " Night Must Fall" 10; Janakl 33.
12:4(&gt;.-Don Kirshner's Rock Conart 4; Wrestling 13
1·DO-Midnlglghf Special 3,.4,15.
1. 4(&gt;.-News 13.
2·30-News 3.
3:DO-Movto "Scudda·Hool Scudda·Hayl" 3
• .»-Movie " Lancer Spy" 3.
6:DO-Movle "The Period Snob" 3.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER It, 1976
6:DO-Summer Semester 10.
6·»-Fun for EveryontJ 6; Summer Semnler I ;
Treehouse Club tO; Kentucky Afield 13.
?.DO-Saturday Report 3; AG·USAA; Eddie Saundorl
6; TroehoustCiub8; U.S. Farm Report 10; Groovle
Goolles 13.
7·30-Bullwlnkle 3; Cartoont .4; Vlilty of 1M
Dinosaurs 6; Harlem Globetrotters Popcorn
Machine 8; Man from C.O.S. I. 10; Make A Wllh 13;
Mister Rogers 20.
8:DO-Woody Woodpecker 3;.4,15; Tom and JerryGrape Ape6,13; Sylvester and Tweety 1,10; StMrne
Street 20.
8·30-Pink Panther 3,.4,15; Bugs Bunny-Road RIHIMI'
B; Bugs Bunny and Frlendl 10.
9·DO-Jabberlaw 13; Big Blue Marble 6; Electric
Company 20.
9.30-Scooby·Ooo-Oynomuft 6,13; Tarzan 8,10; Mister
Roget'S 20.
10:oo-McDufl. the Talking Dog 3,•.15; Shazaml·lsls
10; Zoom 20.
10.30-Monster Squad 3,4,t5; Kroflt Supershow 6,13;.
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
lt :DO-Land of the Lost 3,4,15; Ark II 1,10; Inner
Tennis 20.
11 :30-Big John, Little John 3••• 15; Club Club 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.

a.

t2 :DO-Klds from C.A.P.E.R. 3,.4,15; Hot Dog 6; Fit
Albert 8,10; Action News lor Kids 13; Crockett'•
VIctory Garden 20.
12:3o-Ara's Sports World 3; American Bandltand 13;
Muggsy 4,15; Soul Train 6; . Way Out Games 81
Gomer Pyle. USMC 10.
t :DO-Star Trek 3; Champions .4; Children's Film
Festival 8, 10; Wrestling 15; Lowell Thomat
Remembers 33.
1:30-Thal Good Ole Nashville Music 6; lrontlde 131
I
Wild, Wild World of Animals 33.
2:DO-Marshall Football Highlights 3. Treasure Hunt I
4; Ara's Sports World 6; Grandsfand 15; Film 8;
Urben League 10; Family Theatre 33.
2:1s-Baseball15
2:30-Wido World of Sporls6, 13; Adam-12 A; Wildlife In
Crisis 10; VIewpoint 8; Insight 33 .
2:35 - NFL Game of the WHk 3.
3:DO-Baseball Warm-Up • : U.S. Open Tennla 1.10;
Family At War 33.
3·1s--Baseb311 3, •.
• ot&gt;--College Football Pre-Game Show 6,t3; Bit With
Kntl 33.
• :ll-College Footbell 6, 13.
• :»-Food Preserving 33.
5:DO-WrestllnQ t5; Romagnolls' Table 33.
5:»-Muslc Projed Presents 33.
5:&amp;-Green Acres 3; Scoreboard •·
5:5s--Polltlcal Program B,10.
6 DO-News 3••• B. 10; God Has The An&amp;wer 15;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 33.
6·»-NBC News 3,.4,15; Rhoda 8; CBS News 10; Lilla,
Yoga and You 33.
7:DO-World at War 3; Lawrence Welk •·15; Hee Hew
8; Price Is Rtghl10k; Rivals of Sherlock Holmes 33.
7 30-Trea•ure Hunt 3; News 6; Last of the Wild 101
Nashville 'on the Road 13
8 DO-Emergency! 3,.,15;
Shark .Terror, Death.
Truth 6,13; Jefferson• 8, 10; AI The Top 33.
B 30-Movle "The New Original Wonclor Woman" 6, 13;
Ivan the Terrible 8,10.
9:DO-Perry Como 3,.4,15; Mary Tyler Nv:Jore 8,101 ;
Upstairs, Downstairs 33.
9 30-Bob Newhart 8, tO
10·DO-Miss America Pageant 3,•, 15; Hee Haw 6; Pilot
8,10; Don Adams Screen Test 13; Youth In Troublt
33
10.5s--Polltlcal Program B, 10
ll.DO-ABC News 6; News B,10,13; Janakl 33.
11 1s--Movle 6
11 :3o-Movle " Denver &amp; Rio Grande •• 8; Waady
nayes · Football 10; Movie " The Man Who Cried
Wolf" 13.
'12 DO-Movie " The Heroes of Telemark" 10.
12 1s--PMA Pulse 15.
,
12 :30-Mary Hariman, Mary Hartman 3; Saturday
Night 4,15.
! ·DO-Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman 3; Sammy and
Company 6; Don Klr!hner·s Rock Concert 8. Movie
" The Monolllh Monsters" 13.
1.»--Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman 3
2.oo-Mary Hartman, Mary Hariman 3.
2 »-Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman 3; ABC News 13.
3 DO-News 3.
3 30--Movle " Moonllde" 3.
5 DO-Movie " Conllrm or Deny" 3
6·DO-Movle "He Hired lhe Boss" 3.

, ,;n:J;;;:;,:~~==::j

Tf-H5 WAY-

9:oo-Movlt " Medici I Story" 3,.4, 15; Movie "Brl_.'
4,t3; U.S. A. People &amp; Pollllct 20.33.
9:30-Movle " C.C and Company" 1,10; Anwlclll
Indian : A Qulot Rvotullon 20,33.
tO:DO-News 20; P1ul Nuchlms 33.
1t :DO-News 3,.4,6,8,10,13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report

u

Laver of
tennis
30 Devour

~W~M®f:o'::~..Jc

33 Apiece

Un11&lt;ramble the,. r..,r lumbl..,
one lett.er to each IM!uat&lt;, to
rorm four ordtn&amp;rJ wordt.

lt "Maria ''
3$ l:!oxlng
great ·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
is

AXYDLBAAXIt
LONGFELLOW

One teller simply stands for another In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for lhc two O's, etc Stnglc letters.
•rostrophes, !he Jen ~lh and formati?n of th e words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are d11ferent.

1

r

lJ I

•••
WHEN il-1150CC:UI&lt;!:5

ISPENOR±

II

ATW

AT A 50L.D MINE,
IT'S NOT APT 1D
. C'I5TUI\'f.!l THE.

80*·

RW

ATWDW PH KE BGDGIW.

LAFF - A - DAY

HAWDKW
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IF A MAN WORKS HARD AND
UVES RIGHT, HE CAN'T HOW HIMSElF BACK. -

GOODY··

\

ROCKY· BYE

I

1ATER,~ ,r

i IN TH"··

Beautiful day, eh. Haskins'"(
I

I

••'

•

HE FINALLV
DRAPPED OFF

TO SLEEP

LAWRENCE WELK
1'1 ' ' ' 1!'"1

HEV. CAT!
I SEE THE'I 'RE
li:EMAKIN&amp;
"KIN6KON6'

,.......,.,._,
Yetaerd•y~•

J• ....... .IULfP ABOUT GRASSY BURLAP

IAnlwen •w..t,..
dooe
'

1Dnlrl11'l UPfC.~GI!~" "'"o'•Mfl
s.lll.. z.,IIOio-STIJBIIL£
•.

•

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept.IO.l976

morning serv1ce, 9 30 a m, with
pr~hlng on first ond third Sun·
day of month by G~Piclcens.

ship, 7.30 p .m . Prayer mHtlng,

10 a .m.; Pra~er meeting ,
Tt.ursdoy, 7 p.m., Sundoy e11.,mg
service, 7 p .m.
ZION CHURCH Of CHRIST.
Pomeroy-Horr l10nville Rd .. Oorr
Kennedy , pastor, Bill MtEiroy,
Sunde~y
school supt
Sunday
school , 9:30am ; morning wor·
sk1pand communion. 10·30 a m:
Sunday •w•ntrfg youth Ckrittlon
Endeavor, 6 30 p m., worship ser·

9; 30 o m. Preaching MNk:e,
IOA5am NoevenlngMI'Yice.

PRESBYTERIAN vlco, 7 30 p.m. WodnOldoy ovon-

@~Psl!l1s· t() s ()sts ·

SIIVERSVlll E C MMUNITY Bruce Smith, pastor Wallace ner of Second and Andeuon,
CHURCH, Sunday
I Mrvico, Oamowaod, Supt 111M Scloao!, Moson Pastor, Wo!iot Cloud. "'

~~

TRINITY CHURCH. Rov, W H,
Pernn , pastor. Roy Moyer Sun·
day school supt. Church School
9 15 a .m .. WDrlhip service 10.30
a .m. Choir rehearsal. Tuesday
7.30 p m. under direction of Mrs
Paul Nease

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE• Corner Unton ond .
Mulberry , Rev Clyde V Hendet·
ton po•tor Sunday schQOl, 9 30
om , Glen McCiu*Q, 1upt .. morn Ing worship , 10 30 a .m., even ing
service, 7.30. m•d ·week service
Wednesday , 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAl , The Rav

MIDDlEPORT CHURCH Of THE
NAZARENE
Re11 . Don Cole,
pot tor , Mrs. Mary la1hey, Sunday
sthool supt . Sunday Khool , 9 30
a.m
morning worship, 10•30
am :
Sundo~
evongallstic
meeting, 7 30 p m
Pro)ler
m"tmg Wednesday, 70:)0 p .m

UNITED

MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUN TY,
Pw1ght L Zovitz , director.

1ng prayer m.. llng ond B1ble
1t1Jdy, 7.30p.m.

PRESBYTERIAN , ReY
frnest
Stncklln , pastor. Sunday church
school. 9.30 a .m • Mt s ,• Nomer
Lee supt .. mornh,v worship ,

Pme Grove The Rev. Will iam
Middlesworth, Pastor . Church
ser\llces ' :30 a .m. Sunday School

HA R RI S 0 N VI LL E

THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy
Ro~

W. Wmmg offker m charge
Sunda y, lO o.m
Holiness
meeting , 10 30 am , Su nda~
SChool Young People's legion, 7
p m : Thursday , 1 to 3 p m.,
Ladies Home leoglte 7 p m Prep
dasses

•o 30a.m

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP·
liST CHAPEL Route I , ShodtPostor Bobby Elkms. Sunday
schliiOI 5 p .m Sunday worship ,
S.•S p m .. Wednesday prayer ser
vke , 7 30p.m

R ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Corner of Sycamore ond Second
SIS Pomeroy The Rew Wdi1am
Middlesworth Pastor Sunday
School ot 9 ,.5 o m and Chu rch
Serv•ces 1) o m.
· SACRED HEART , ReY Fattier
Paul 0 Welton , pastor. Phone
992·2825 Satu rday evening Man ,
7 30, Sunday Man , 8 and 10 a .m.
Confe~sion , Saturday , 7·7·30p m .

Th e wheels are turn ing .. those mental wheels

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
Of CHRIST , 200 W Moin Sl. , Jarry
Poul . mmiste r, phone 992 7666

and the emot1onal ones

too-that 10 th 1s "com puter age" so lve the equat ions of ro mance.
And like any compu ter the teen-age mind operat es the way 11 has been
program med. Alrea dy he has some firm 1deas abou t g ~rl s. ""d she equal ly ftrm
1deas about bo~s . Each knows the kmd of person he likes. the ktnd of character he
respects. the ktnd of relatwnsh1p he conSiders worth while
. Of cou rse, the Immediate qu est iOn IS whethe r to date . But the deeper ques-

That part of the progra mming, Parent, is largely your responSibility And
only YO UR CHURCH can effect ively share 1t with you'

With the hope it will, in some measure', foster and help sustain that
which is good in family, and community life, this feature is sponsored by
, the business firms and organizations whose names appear below.

KINCSBURY HOME SALES
&amp;SERVICE) I_NC.
THE FINEST IN MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Marn
Pomeroy
Ph 992-7034 '

•

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC:
Ph. 991-2101

WILKINSON'S

John F. Futlz

Pomeroy

,, SMALL ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
4'8 Locust St. Mrddleport Ph 992-3092

RACINE PWMBING &amp; HEATING
" HElL" DEALER
·
Racrne
Ph, 949·2U2

Third St.

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON
Call 949-2831 For an Appointment
Ratrne, Ohio ·

REUTER.S.B_OGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

'
•'

2t4 E. Matn
,7

•..

Pomeroy

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
()pen 8 to 5- Closed Thurs.

Ph. m.mo

Racme, Ohio

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE
Racine
Ph. 949·2550

''

ELLIS &amp;SONS SOHIO

1' Nationwide Ins. Co of Columbus. 0
.•
104 W. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2311

'

BETSY ROSS BAKERY
BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Middleport
Ph. 992-3030

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

BAKERS OF GOODBREAD

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS
992-m5

Pomtr&lt;JY

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT .
"·· "

'¥20

.....

LOUIS W OSBORNE
E. Matn
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2178

.
•

DUDLEY'S
TWO LOCATIONS
39 N. Second 51.
Middleport, 0 .
44 Court St
Galhpohs, 0.

MARK VSTORE

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
WE HANDLE ONLY U.S.D.A. CHOICE
MEATS

..' GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL ,
.r

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DediCated lo the Meigs-Mason Area

Ph. m -3284

Middleport
Phone 992-2156

FRESH PROOUCE &amp; PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

MIDWAY MARKET .l;.~m,:;~~a2
MARKET · PhM:~-~7~~

b£B·s

:.··.,....~, AMERICAN PAINTING

co.

INDUSTRIAL&amp; COMMERCIAL
"'; 446-0963 Addrson, OhiO Ph. 992-6173

.

RUTLAND

FIRS I

BAPTIST

CHURCH-Orewy Gore, supt.
Sunday School , 9.30 a m., mom·
mgworship, 10 45a.m.

THE HILAND CHAPEl. George

Ro lph Zundel , pastor. W11l1am
Watson , Sundov school supt.,
Sunday school, 9.30 o.m. BYF, 6
~p , m., Btble study Wednesday. 7
p m .. cho.r prachce, Wednesday,
8 30p.m

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
2t6 w. Second
Pomeroy
Ph. '1'12·3863

"

~ ~ .ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
1
hi~ cine
Ph. 949-9130

Attend the church of your
choice .
Ph 992-3498
Pom~roy
.

RIQENOUR SUPPLY
Furn1ture &amp; Hardware
Homel1fe Saws

Chesler

. t
i

!
IJ

'

RACINE FOOD MARKET

THE STORE WITHAHEAf\T
fiiCiM
Ph 949-2626

II

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm 's Korner

Kerm1t Walton
Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
C~urch

7 30p.m

Robert T. Bumgarner,
Dtre&lt;:tor
POMfROYCLUSTER
Rev . Robert Hayden

Miles Trout
posJor. Sunday
school. 10a .m .. Steve little, supt.
Evening serv1ce , 7 p m. : prayer
matting, Thursday, 7p m

SilVER RUN FREE B"'PTIST,

Rev Jome1 Corbitt

CHESTER

and offi ce su ppl 1es-

gtfls
99 Mill Sl

630pm
ENTERPRISE, Worshtp 9 o m

730 p.m,
1-"'NGSVILW: CHRISTIAN CHUR·

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE

SYRACUSE ClUSTER

faSi tng Tuasday ,

Roger R1ebel
Ray Riggs
St. Rl 1
Chester
Ph, ?15-4100

10 am .

FOfiEST RUN, Wo.-.h•p 9 am
Church SchooiiOa.m .
MINERSVILLE , Worship 10 am
Churt h School9 a.m
SYRACUSE. Chruch School 9·30
a .m. Worsh1p service 7.30p m.

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Timothy Sm1th
Cluster Leader
Rev Steven W1lson
Assoc1ate
BETHANY , (Dorcas), Wors.tup
9 30 a m . Church School 10 30
om
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30
a.m Wor5h1p JO 30 o m. 2nd and

11 am. : Sunday night service5
Chrilfton Endeovor 7:30 p m ..
Song servtt e , 8 p.m Preach~ng
8·30 p m. M1dweek Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7 p m : Roy
Adoms , loy leoder

4th Sundays

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,

APPLE GROVE Sunday School
9 30om Worsk1p 7·30 p m, 1st

lst, 2nd , 3rd Sundays, 930 a .m

nigt.tprayerservice, 730p m

Dexter Rd , langsvtlle Ohto, Rav
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor. Sunday
School 11
o.m
Saturday
preochmg servKes 7 30 p.m
Wodnesdoy evening Btble aludy
ot7 30p m

sh1p 2nd Sunday 7~30 p m . .fth
Sunday 9 ·30o m : Prayer m&amp;etlng
W&amp;dnesday 7·30 p m UMW ht
Tuesday 7 ~p m.

Roger Watson, pastor Jess1e
Wh1te, Sunday schoolsupl Morn·
1ng worship , 9 ~ a .m , Sun·
doyschool , 10 ~ a .m , evemng

Bailey Run Rood, Rev Emmett
Rowson , pottOr Handley Dunn
supt Sunday sthCKll, 10 a.m Sun
day eventng serv1te 7 30. Bible
leoth1ng 7 30 p.m. Thursday

Btble Study Thursday 1 p m Choir
Practice Thundoy8 p . m.

8rown , supply pastor; Sunday
school9 AS a .m , Sunday e\len1ng

.Cth Sunday 9·15 om Worsh1p
lst, 2nd . 3rd Sundays 9 15 o m .,
AthSundoy7 30p m
MORNING STAR, Worsh1p 9 30
am , Church S&lt;ihool 10 30 a .m ..
Mtd Week Service Wednesday 8

CHURCH , Eugene Underwood ,
pastor, Howard Coldwell Jr ..
Sunda{ S&lt;:hool Supt .. Sunday
Schoo , 9 30 a.m : Morning Ser·
mon . 10:30 am , Sunday even
ing serv1ce 7 p m

pm
MO!tSE CHAPEL , Worshp 11

lEI ART f"'LtS UNITED
BI!ETHREN. Rev Froe!ond Noms ,

a .m ' Church School9·30a m
PORTLAND, Worship 7 •30 p m .
Church School9lla m .

pastor, Floyd Noms, supt Sundoy
school , 9 30 o m , morn1ng ser· •
man, 10.30 a.m .. Prayer service ,

10 30a m.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
ReY . Richard Thomas
Pastor
DuaneSydenstrtclcer
John Douglas
Auoc1ot&amp;s
JOPPA, Worshtp 10 am, Chur·
ch Sckool 9 a m , Prayer Meeting

PROPHECY f G P Smith , pa1tor
Sunday Sct.ool, 10 a m. 1 Arthur
Henson , Supt ; Morning Worship ,
11 am , Young Peoples servtce,
7 p m , Eventng serv1ce, 7 30
p rTJ
Wednesday Mld·Week
Prayer S.rvtce , 7 30 p .m. , Youth
m"t1ng , 6:30pm Evening war·
shtp, 7 30 p.m.

Wadnesdoy Bp.m.
lONG BOttOM. Sunday school

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev. Herbert Grbro.

at 9 30 om . Worah1p servtcH at
1 30 p.m . Bible study and Youth
meellng at 8 p . m
on
Wednesdays.

pastor Warship service, 11 a .m
and 7·30 p.m Sunda~
Sunday
School , 9·30 a .m R1chord Barton,
sup f
Prayer
meeting ,

NORTH BETHEL. Worshtp 11
om :ChurchSchool10o m

Wednosdoy, 7.30p m.
BRADFORD CHURCH

ALFRED Sunday School 9 30
am, Worship 10 _.5 o.m., Prayer
meet ing WednHdoy 7 ~5 p m.,
UMW3rdTuesday8p .m
REEOSVILLf. Sunday School9·30

CHRIST , Jock Perry minister Sun·
day St hool 9 30 am. , mormn9
church 10.30 om ; Sunday a\len ·
tng
servic11,
7 •30
p.m
Wednesday service 8 p m

pm
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER.

CH , Roger C. Turner. paStor
• Sunday school. 9 30 a m , Sunday
morn~ng worshtp, 10.30, Sunday
@venmg servtee, 7 30.
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy Envoy
and Mrs Ray Wining, oHkers m
charge. Sunday haltness meeting
10 am , Sunday school, 10 30
o.m Leader YPSM Eloise Adorns
7·30 p m
sol\lat1on m"tlng
Lad ie s Home league 12 noon to 2
p m , Thursday; prayer mHtlng
ond Bible study, Thursday, 7.30
p.m .

MIDDLEPORT
MT MORI"'H MPTIST, Corner
Fourth and Mo1n Middleport ,
Rev. Henry Key , Jr pastor Sun
day School 9 ·30 a m , Mrs Ervm
Baumgardner , sup! : Morn.ng
worship 10 ·~5 am .'

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES. Lorry
Carnohon
pres1dlng min1ster
Sunday Bible lecture, 9:30 a .m.
Watthtower study, 10 30 a .m ..
Tuesday, 81ble study, 7 30 p.m
Thur~day ministry Sthool, 7•30
p. m , service meeting 8·30 p.m.

MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,

p.m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,

Rac.l ne Ro ute 2, the Rev James
M Munc~ pasto r Su nday school
9 · ~5 o m ; morn1ng worshtp , 11
o m
evenmg wonh1p, 7 30
Preyer meehng, Tuesday, 7.30
p.m., Young peoples meetmg

EAST LETART, Chruch School

Wednesday. 7 30 p.m : Saturdoy

Fourth Sundoy 10 30 a.m . Wor

HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,

WESLEYAN (Roc.na). Sunday servteo 7.30. Wodnosdoy Bible
Schoof 10om. Worsh1p 11 am..

Study. 7 I30p m.

30 p m Thurldoy.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST,

Corner Sudh and Palmer , the Rev
Peter Granda!, postor; Danny
Thompson superintendent Sun·

doy School. WMPO Rodto pro·
gram 7 "5 a .m , Sunday School,
, ,, 9 15 a .m , Mormng Worship
10 IS am Youth achvll les and
fellowship for .Jun tor and 181'1ior
h1gh students. 6 p.m. Sunday
evenmg worship, 7:30 p m Mid·
week
proyer
urvt Cttl ,
Wednesdoy , 7·30p m
dleport 5th and Ma \n . George
Gloze, mtmst•r, James Sheels
supenntehdent. Bibte school, 9·30
o m , morning worship, 10 30
o m . evenmg worship , 7 30
prayer se rvtce
7 p m
Wednesday

MT UNION BAPTIST, Rav R 0.

lETART FALlS. Church School
tsr. 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10 15om

worshtp, 7 30p m
TUPPERS PlAINS CHRISTIAN

SUTTON, Church School 9 30 · Wed~doy . 7.30p.m.
o m Wonhtp hi ond 3rd Sundoys
'HESHIRE CHURCH OF GOD OF

Of

a m Worshtp 7 30 p m , Proyer
LAUREl CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Meellng 7·30 p m Tuesday CHURCH, Rev Floyd F Shook ,
Visitotlon7 30p m 1st Thursday
SILVER RIDGE , Worship 10 o.rn.
Ckurth Schoo19 o m
TUPPERS ,PLAINS , Worsh1p 9
o m ChurchSchool10a .m

pastor, lloyd Wright, Sunday
School Supt , Mornmg Wonhlp
9 30 a .m .. Sunday School 10 20
am , Wednetday Prayer and Bl ·
ble Slud';' 7·30 p.m . ; Sundo';'

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, avonlng worship 7 30 p m , Choir
George Fredemk , sup! Str\IICe

Procllce Thursday , 7 p m

weekly, 9 30 am. on Sundoy
Preathlng first ond third Sundays
of month by CI1Hord Sm1tk, 9•30
am

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION.
Dorrell Ooddrill, postar Sunday

School,

9:30 o m..

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
1

Charlts Runell , Sr., minister,
R1ck Motomber, supt , S~Jndav
school, 9 30 a .m .. worship ser·

vice

10 30 o.m. Btb!o Study,

Tuea.day, 7 30p m

Leonard

REORGANIZED CHURCH_ OF

G•lmore , ftrst elder: evening aer
v1ce. 7•30 p.m
Wednesday
prayer meeting 730 p .m

JESUS CHRIST OF LATIER DAY
SAINTS Portland Racine Rood
Wlll1am Routh pastor o.nny

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO, Evans, Sundoy School Dlroctor,
Rac1ne Route 2 The Rev Charles
Hand , pastor Sunday school 9 ~5
am , mornu'1g worship , 11 om .
Evenmg servtce\ Tuesday and
Fr1doy 7 30 p m

Paul

Nev1lle,

7.30p.m

'

p .m.

Dudding laM, Mason . W. Va. '"'
Cheater TennaM, Poetor. Sunday
School9 d o.m.: Children's Church ""' p m. Young People'• Ser·
vice 6:45 p.m . Evangelistic S.r·

•
•
'
•
:

Bald Knob . R•v. E. J Griffllh,
supt. of church: Rev. l lt.
Glueaancomp , pastor; Roger

slonary Council 10 a .m . firs! and "" •
third luHdays. Pray•r ond Bible "':
Study, Wadne.day, 7:30p.m
••

po11or Sundoy School 9 30 o.m ,

Morning ••~Ice, 10.30 a .m. ,
youth ••r¥1ce , 6 .-CS p.m.
bongellshc "rv lc:e 7.30 p .m.
Prayer meeting. Thunday, 7.30

CHARLE.V~

Sunday School , 9 30 a .m . : Morn·
tng worsj-11p, 10 30 a.rp. , Sunday
evenm~
ter'Yice 7 p.m.
Wednesday ev•nlng pra~er ser·
v1tes 1 30 p .m

BEARWALlOW RIDGE CHURCH

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev Earl

OF CHRIST \ ( •'l ug Seaman ,
1rHn1ster B1ble ~tv.Jy , 9·30 am:
morn1ng wonh1p , 10 30 o m ;
even1ng worsh1p
7 30 p m.

Shuler, pastor Worshtp serv1ce
930 am Sunday school , 10 30
a m Bible Study and pra,yer ..,.
vice Thursday, 7 30 p .m

Wednesday ltb!ostudy, 7:30p.m .
KENO CHUIICH OF CHRIST,

CARLETON CHURCH ~tngsbury
Rood Gory King . pastor. Sunday

Geot'ge Fr-.r~ck , supt Sunday

school 9 30 am i eventng wor·

News 3,. ,1.1: At!C News 13; Andy GriHIIh 6,
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrascolendas 33.
7·DO-Truth or Cons.l; To Telllhe Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 I ; News 10; Don Adams
Screen Test 13; Family Affair 15; Woman 20; Black
Perspective ont he News 33.
7.30-Porter Wagoner 3; SoapbO~ 4, City by the River
6; MacNeil -Lehrer 20,33; $25,000 Pyramid 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Pop! Goes the C.ountry 15.
S·DO-NBC Smllln' Saturday Morn ing Parade 3,4,15;
ABC's Saturday Sneak Peek 6, 13; Everybody Rides
the Carousel 8, TO; Washington Week In Review
20,33
8·30-Sanford &amp; Soh 3,4,15; Walt Street WHk 20,33

~ · »-NBC

MASON ASSEMI!. Y OF GOD, :

FREEDOM GOSI'EL MISSION ot viet 7:30 p.m. Womon's Mls· ,

\

meeting Tuesday, 7.30 p m. ; William Campbell , pastor SundCJ)'; !
youth meeting, 6 p m. Sunday. School, 9·30 a .m : James Hughes , •
~eoders Ado Von Meter ond Gret· supt., even ing s•rvlce , 7:30p.m.
Ia Suttle, Sunday evening wor· Wednesday evening proy tr
skip, 7 p.m . through winter man· mMtlng , 7:30pm Youth prayer
lht .
service .ach Tuetday

!

ANOTHER
MINUTe OR
::;o AND we
COULD BE'
AIII:SOII:NE!

MT , HERMON CHURCH Of THE
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ,
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST, Lotorl, W. Vo .. Rr. !, Rov Gourgo

FOR ~EAYEN '5
SAKE- , EA5Y--

WIN At BRIDGE
East-South in tug-of-war

WHAT DO YOU
CAL.L THAT·- A

CAL.M DOWN~

TRANQUILIZER
~

NO RTH

¥ 10 7 3

me&lt;~llng ,

+ J84

to A K 10 8

o.m and 7 30 p m, Wednesday
evening Bible ttudy , 7 30 p m

INDEPENDENTHOLINESS CHUR·

CH. INC . - Corner Fourtt. and
Ltncoln St1.. Midd leport, Rev .

!

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb
of Colwnbus spent Labor Day
with her aunt, Mrs. Hazel
Carnahan and Mr. Russell
Radcliffe of Syracuse visited
them m the afternoon.
Mr. ami Mrs. Delbert
Walker and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Gawthrop and children
of Summersville, W. Va.
spent the weekend with their
mother, Mrs. Don Walker.
Rev . Don Walker, Mr .
Henry Roush and Mr. and
Mrs. Linley Hart left Thurs~Y and spent over Labor
Day with Mr. and Mrs. John
Fisher at Marblehead and
spent some time fishing m
Lake Erie.
Mrs Wiley Ours underwent
at
Veterans
surgery
Memorial Hospital.

son , ~onday School s upefinten· :::dent Sunday school , 9·30 a .m ..
evening wonhlp, 1 30 p m..
prayer and pral1e ser\lke , "
Wednesday, 1 30 p m

•J 10963

+7 5 3

iiaJ'RI:~~IIE

I'M B!:HI\lb t{OIJ

1\llll~tJb 1\lfo.T \WoW!

Wlllb lD Dl~ ...

'-----

1

"' ' 4
North·South
vulnerable
West

Nortlt Eut

Pass
Pass

IN T 2 +
Pass Pas.~

gospel.

another club. Lo and behold
East , who had dropped the
jack on the first club, played
the queen this lime and South
was tn busmess
He led the good 10 of clubs
East made his best play by
rufling with the 10 of trumps
and South carefully underruffed This left East on lead w1th
the last d1amond and the jackSIX of spades. South held the
queen of hearts and queeneight of spades while North
held a spade, heart and club
If East led a trump, South
would just take the last three
tricks. If he ted the last diamond. South would d1scard his
htgh heart, ruff m dummy and
clatm

~~~

Opemng lead - 9 +

1

A Pennsylvania reader
wants to know 1f we overcall a
By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
East's \W&lt;Hilamond over- spa de ·opening With two
call on a four-&lt;:ard suit is hearts Your hand ts.
.93 YAKJ64 tK93.864
rather unusual. bu t he JUSt
•
Both
sides are vulnerable
hated to pass w1th h1s fme
'
We
recommend a pass since
hand
there
IS too much danger of
South reb1d to two spades
mt.o real trouble. Still ,
running
and played 1the hand there.
1f
you
like
to-live dangerously
ANNIE- SEEING IS RELIEVING
East cashed three diamonds
a
two-heart
overcallts not the
------"";==- ;-;;====;;-;==~~~~and then played ace and deuce
worst bid ever made
MAVBEIFI
fh t
LET HiM SEE
O ear S
(Do you ha •e a qu6stlon
YOU --IT wou~~L~D. _J ''\"r11oy~c.E The hand looked like a cmch
for
!he eKperts? Wnle "As I&lt;
00 HIM c;
SeT for the rest of the tricks, but
BliCK · South got a rude shock when Jhe Ja cobys " care of thrs
West showed out on the lead of newspaper The Jacobys wilt
the ace of spades Now South answer rnd1v1duaf quest1ons
had to try to hnd a way to 11 stamped, self-addressed
collect e1ghl trtcks He envelopes are enclosed The
entered dummy with a club most mterest,ng questions
and led a spade East's nine wtll be used m thts column
and w•tl rece1ve cop195 of
forced South 's kmg
Ba ck to dumm y w1th JACOBY MODERN I

'

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Pastor Otnnis Bolts Sunday '
School, 10 a.m , wonhip se r~ tce
11.30 o.m and 7.30 p m Prayer
meeting , Wedneadoy , 7 30 p m
HYSELL RUN FREE METHOD IST,
Rev . Herbert Atllng poslor, Sun
day School 9.30 am. morning ,
service, 10 30; youth service , 6 45
p m ; evangelistic ser\llce . 1 30 1
p m Prayer meeting , Thur•day ,
7 30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLI C CHURCH -:,
OF JESUS CHRIST, Thomas L. t 1
Holmea., pastor. Bible study , ~~
Soturdav 7.30 p.m .. E"' cmgeli1 t1c p.m ., prayer meehng Tu esday
7 ·30 p m : Bible Study. Thursday ,.,:.
7 ·30 p m
..
:

...

The family of Mr and Mrs. :
Arthur Atherton had a streak :
of hard luck recently Their :
son, Clarence, of Long Bot. ;
tom had a faUmg tree strike
his car while driving to work
and badly damaged his car.
And the grandson , Larry
Atherton in the service In a',
southern state, was stung by ,
a scorpion and hospttallzed.
Painting of roofs and other
types of home painting and
repair are the order of the
day in this vtcinlty at the
present Ume.
'
Sunday dinner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Clare nce '
Henderson were Mr and '
Mrs. Dave Williams and
Aaron of Belpre. Lab or Day
VIsitor at the Henderson
home WM her s1ster, Bertha ;
Wright, of Zanesville.

+ AKQ 10

¥ K QJ

'
'

Mrs. Gene Hudson visited
her mother at Manchester,
Ohio over the weekend.
Mr. Hetu'y Roush and son,
Mr. Dale Roush visited Mr.
and Mrs. David Roush and
children in Colwnbus and
attended the Slate Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Weaver :
of Middletown spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth
Turley and sons spent Sunday ,,
with his mother in Gallipolis .'
and visited his father, Mr. ;
Clarence,Turley, a patient In '
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Miller
and daughter of Arm a, Ohio
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George '
Neigler. Mrs . Frankie
Neigler was a dinner guest
Sunday.
Mr. Kenneth Swart of
Akron spent over Labor Day
weekend with his mother, '
Mrs. James Swart and the
AHred Crow family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wolfe and
family of Jackson and Mr
and Mrs. Gle!lfoy Wolle and
son of Strongville spent Labor
Day ,weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Dory Wolle.

¥A2

toAKQ8 7

BORN LOSER

1

Alfred .., Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on Sept. 5 was 37 and the
offering $28.25. Worship
services were held at 10 : ~
with the Rev . Richard
Thomas speaking from
Nehemiah 4:U and I Cor.
3:8-15 on " Partnership With
God." Communion was observed. Attendance was 26.
Alfred's
annual
homecoming will be held
Sunday, Sept. 19 wllh the
,USUIII forenoon services,
dinner a t12 : 30 and afternoon
program beginning at 1:30.
Fea lures will include Rev .
Bishman and members of the
"Rivers of Ufe" mmistry
from Central Ave. Church in
Athens and other visiting and
local talent . Everyone is
· invited.
Attending the Riverboat
Festival and services at the
Pomeroy landing on Tuesday
evemng from here were
Thelma Henderson, Nina
Robinson, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Pullins.
The UMW wiU hold regular
meeting at the church here on
Tllesd~y, Sept, 21, 8 p. rn.
with a potluck lunch to be
served in the basemen't
during ~ social hour.
The Clair Follrod family
and Nma Robinson and Clara
Follrod visited their uncle,
John Follrod, at Mt. Sterling
Sunday, Sept. 5.
Recent guests of Genevieve
Guthrie have been her
daughter, Muine Yost Bod
Ella Yost of Sucar Grove and
her sister-in-law, Mildred
Story of Columbus.

· -

•QJ
SOUTH !D)

Racine Social Events

~arpnack.

EAST

+ 962
to 96532

O'Doll Monloy , poslor , Sony Hud• "

Court Sts , third ll oor over
L1ghthouu ll:estauro nl
Hitnry
Cook, pastor , Sunday sc hoo l, 10
a .m , morning worship , II om. ,
e 'Y en t ng service
7 30
Wednesday evenmg se rvlte ,
7 :.30. Interdenominational fu ll

WEST
¥9 8654

Soturdoy, 7 p m,
THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH OF
RUTlAND COMMUNITY CHUR· POMEROY - Corner Mom and

CH, Sunday School , 9 30 a .m.,
worshi p ser\ll te,
II a m.,
Wednesday prayer meetlnv. 7.30
p.m ~outh servkes , Sunday, 1
p.m.: Sundoynightworshlp, 7 :30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
N~ARENE , R•v•lloyd D Grimm,
Jr ., pastor Sunday school , 9~ 30
om , worship service , 10 30om
Broadcast live over WMPO ' young
people s
service ,
6 45 ,
evongehsht service, 7,30 p.ll't,
Prayer meeting , Wednesday , 7.30
p,m. Mtss1onary meeting , 7 30
p m ftrstWednvsdayofmonth
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second
and Pome(oy" Sts , Stan Crolg,
pastor Sunday school , 9 "5o m,
wors h1p servtce, 11 a m tratn ing
umon, 6 30 p.m , evenlf!g wor·
sk1p serv1te, 7 30 p.m M1d Week
prayer servtc• . Wed nesday, 7.30
pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST P
0 Bo" 487, M11ler St , Mason . W
Va Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m
Wo rsh1p 11 a m and 7 p m Bible

10

• s42

p m Wednesday , Alfred Wolfe. Second, Middieport, paslor , Cur· ':
lay leader
tis Stephen. Church school , 9.30 -1
WHITE'S CHAPEL , Coolville RO om , preo&lt;hing services 10 30- •

By Mrs. Fraocls Morris
Mr. 81ld Mrs. J,ack Sharp.
nack and son Jackie of
COiwnbus spent a couple of
UNJH D f"'ITH NON ·
DENOMINATIONAL, Rev. Robert days with their parents, Mr.
Sm tth pastor Sunday School , 81ld Mrs. JaCk Sharpnack Md
9 30 a m Class leader. leo H1ll , Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Proffitt .
worsht p servtce 10·30 am · c.hur·
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Baker
ch 7 30 p .m
81ld
Miss Marabelle SharpEDEN UNITED BI!ETHREN IN
CHRI$T, Elden R Bloke, pastor. nack of Columbus spent
Sunday School 10 a m ., Howard Sultday with their parents,
McCoy, supl., Morning sermon , Mr.
Jack
and
Mrs.

and 3rd Sundo~s . Prayer meellng
Wednesday 7 30 p m . Fellowsh1p
supper ftrst Saturdoy6 p.m. UMW
2ndTuesday730p.m .

CHURCH OF CHRIST. Mtd·

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

CHURCHOF GOD.

Loc.oted ot Rutland on New Lima
Rood , next to Forest Atre Pork ,
R~tv Roy Rouse , poster, Robert
Mun;er Sunday Schoolsupt. SUn·
day school , 10 30 a.m .. worship
7 30
p m 6ib l v
Study .

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 282
Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy, Paul J
Wh 1te , Pastor. (;ory Basham Sun·
doy school supt Sunday school ,
9 30 o m , mornmg worship,
10 30, evenmg worsh1p , 6 30 p m
M1dweek prayer serv1te, 7 30

7

'"

COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH

M1dweek
prayer · nrv1ce ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p rtl . , men 's
prayer meehng, Saturday, 7 p .m .,
m1ss1onary me8tlng
second
WednHdoy , 7 30p m.

Mulberry Heights Road , Pomeroy
Pastor, Gerard Seton, Sabbath
School Supenntendenl , Claro
Mcintyre Sabbath Sc.kool , Sotur·
doy afternoon ot 2·00 w1th Wor·
s h1p Service follow1ng ot 3 15

Lowrance Manley , pastor, Mrs
Russell Young Sunday School
Supt . Sunda~ Scltuol 9:30 am
hentng
w o rshi p .
7 30
Wedne~day prayer meettng. 7 30

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Ph. 985-3308

DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev
Lelon Glasure, postor Sunday
Sc hool 1 9 30 am.: youth and
tuntor youth service , 6 AS p m ,
evening worsklp , 1 30 p m ,
prayer and praise, Wednesday ,

Rev R~thord E. Jorv1s
ASBURY, Worship 11 am Chu rck School 9·50 am UMW f.rst
Tuesday Btblt Study Thurs 7 30
pm

ADVENTIST ,

OYESV!LLE COMMUNITY CHUR

HEINER'S BAKERY
Huntington, W. Va

TIST Comer Ash and Plum . Noel
Herrman. pastor Saturday even
tng serv1ce 7•30 p m.; Sunday
School , 10 am ; Sunday tvening
worsh1p, 1 30 p m
MEIGS

Preocktng 9 30 0 m , f1nt and Se·
cond Sundays of each month ,
thtrd and fourth Sundays each
mon th , worsh ip servtce a t 7 30
p m Wednesday evemngs at
7 30 Prayer ond B1ble Study

THE SALVATION ARMY. !IS
'

MIODLEPORT FREEWILl BAP· ing Sib o study 7·30.

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Jr UMYF Wednasdoy 3 30 p m.

COMPLE TE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sls.Mtddleport Ph. 992-9921

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

lh1rd Ave the Rtv Willia m K111t~
ttl, postor Ronald Dugan , Sun ·
day School Supt Cloues for all
ages, evening service, 7 30, 81ble
study , WednesdaY. 7 30 p m..
youth services Friday, 7 30 p .m

NAZARENE, Rev, Dale Bon ,
postor, Bob Moore, Sunday
School supt , Sunday school
don&amp;i tor all ages. 9 30 am ..
mormng worsh1p , 10:.45 a .m.:
NYPS , 6 30 p m., evangel1strc ser·
vice, 7 30 p m Prayer and

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Rev

'

PENTECOSTAL ,

Rev Robert Bumgomer
HEA. TH , Rober t Bumgarner,
Pastor Worship 10 30 o m Chur·
chSchool9.30a m UMYF6p.m
RUTLAND , Wi lbur H1lt , Pastor
Wonh1p 10 30 a m. Church School
9.30o m.

SEVENTH-DAY

Rev

man , po sto~; Sunday Sc.hool , 9 30 Rev . Rav OHler, pastor. s~,~nday
am ; Gerold Wells, supt Morn- tchool 9 30 a .m., worsh1p service,
lng wonh1p , 10 30 o .m . Sunday 10.30 a.m. Bible study ond ptoyor
,venlng worship , 7.30, Prayer service, Wednesday , 7.30p.m.
mooring, Wednesday , ? lO p m
RUTlAND
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Oon l.
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Walk er, Pastor, Ronnie Salser , Carl Peak , pastor; Bill Brown,
Su nday school t upt.. Sunday Sunday school supt
Sunday
1chool. 9 30 a m.. morning wor· school, 9,30 a .m , worship a nd
ship, 10 ~0 am., s~,~nday even ing commumon , 10 30 a m Evening
worshir. , 7 30 Wednesday e\l&amp;n· service, 7 30 p m Regular board

Near Long Bottom , Edsel Hart,
pastor. Sunday school , 10 o m
Ch urch , 7 30 p m .; prayer
meallng 7 30p m thursday

CH Ted Jones pastor Sunday
sthool , 9 30 am. : Roy S1gman ,
sup! mornmg worship 10 30;
Sunday evenmg service, 7·30.
m1d week serv1ce. Wedntsdoy ,
7 30 p m

7 30p m

Middleport, OhiO
.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev John A. Cofl·

ChurchSchool10a .m .
ROCK SPRINGS Worshtp 10
a m Church School 9.1So m
UMYF 6 30 p m
FLATWOODS. Worsh1p . 11 o m
Churth SchoollOa .m

Costa, pa5tor . Sunday Schoot.
q,30 a .m · evenmg worsh1p , 7·30
Thursday evelling prayer service ,

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

p.m

CtiURCH , Rev Ralrh Sm ti h
pastor Sunday schoo , 9·30 a .m .
Mrs. Worley Fronds , supenn ten
dent. Preochm g serv tces first &amp;
thtrd Sunday-s follow1ng Sundoy

School
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST

CHURCH ,

FILE LISTS NO

Rev. Jam•• H. Leach , pastor Sun· Hotchar, pastor, Sunday Sc hool
day school , 9 :30 a m.. Ru11tll 9:30 a m Prayer ond B•Lie study :
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Spencer, sup t , Worsh ip service, 7:30pm Cottage Prayer Servk • . ,
Freeland Norrr1, po1tor. Sunday lO 45 am .: Evening wonhlp Tuesday , 10 am . Worship Ser~ •
school 10 a m, Church service. 7 alternating with C E ot 7·30 p m vice, Thursday, 7·30p .m.
-:
p m . Wedne1doy Bible Study , 7 an Sunday Prayer mtollng, 7•30
CAt V"'RV BIBlE CHURCH 26 N. •

Re v Bobbf Porter, pastor Sun·
do~ schoo , 9 ~ o.m
wonh1p
servtce , 11 a m , evenmg service,
7,30, youth serv1ce , Wednesday ,

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN

tiOn , of sen,ous concern to their parents and to their own future: "' hat standard s

King, Sunday school svpt Sunday
1chool . 9 30 am : wonhip atr·
viet, 10·30 am,. Sunday ltr·
vices , 7 p.m. , youth m.. ting ,
Wednesday , 7 p m.

CHEST£R. Worship 9·1 5 o m
Church School lOam
POMEROY, Worship , 10 30om
Church S&lt;:hoal 9 30 am. UMYF"

Conservat•ve, non Instrumental,
Sundov worship, 10 o rn , 81ble
study 11 a .m , wors htp , 6 p m
Wednesday 81ble study, 7 p .m

wha J prwcJples , what co nv1c trons wdl they brmg w1t h them on a date?

BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST, ~ lm Colo, poster. Kovln

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH

MIDDLEPORT

HYSElL RUN FREE METHODIST

Television log for easy viewing

TRACY, OUR

Sundoy school 9 ·~5 a .m .. wortf11p •
11 am . and 7:30p.m. •
Wookly llblo lludy, Wednotdoy. ,!

~ ..,...tee ,

ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Wlllfrod, Sr.. Sundoy School supl.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST _.;
Sundoy School, 9 30 o rn .: prayor IN CHRISTIAN UNION Tho Rev, •

10:30
Harold Deeth , rector. Church ser
MIDDLEPOfiT, Sundoy school,
vkas, 10 30 a m , Holy commu·
nion first Sunday of 1monlh; chur · q:30a m .. Richard Vaughan , supt
ch school , 10 30 a .m for nursery Morn1ng worship , 10 30
SYRACUSE, Matn lng worship, 9
through 12.
POMEROY CHURCHOF CHRIST am Sundapchool, lOam Mrs
R1ctlard Evanson , postor , Bible Sampson Hall , supt
RUTlAND CHURCH Of GOD,
school, 9 30 om , wors htp , 10 30
am . odult worsh ip service end Rev Jame1 D. Guynn , pastor
young peoples meeting , 7 30 Sunday ~ehool , 10 a .m , Sunday
p m. Com bined B1ble st ud y and worship , 11 a .m .. Sunday evening
prayer meehng Wednesday. 7 30 service, 7 p m f WedneSday wo r
sh;p •ecvlco 7.30p.m
p ,m.

Sunday
1sa1ah
35 1·10
Monday
luke
15 1·10
Tuesday
luke
15 11 -32
Wednesday
II Samuel
12 f-14
Thursday
II K1ngs .
7 3-1 1
Friday II Chrontcles
7 12·22'
Saturday
II Chrontcles
36 11-21

Study Wedn..doy 7 p .m .. Vocal

Wodnoodoy, 7:30p.m.
m111lc.
lONG IOTTOM CHIUSTIAN.
FMST SOUTHDN.BAPTIST. Cor· :_

~~~VJetl

by ~· •oMAS JOSEPH .

ACROSS
31 Gilbert and
1 Conquer
- Islands
5 Rags-to38 Opera
riches
highlight
author
31 Splinter
11 Better than 441 Breakwater
never
U Candle
11 Indisposed C2 Spirit lamp

DOWN

to
12 Gunther
subject
13 Of the
VU'gin
Mary
14 State of

t

---~.-::--:--:--:--.. 7-:-:
N-:-in-a-:,7h-e_m_a_n..--:----~;-;-::;--:--~;;--.-::-:

Nina.

what
are

ljOU

doinq
,1.\.Yl':fl

%Reooir's

support
3 Symbol of
courage

:::Y 4

Swamp
II Saul's
grandlather

5 - -garde
I Celtic
deity
7 Endure

17 Sprite
18 Ending for
exist

( 4 wds.)
8 Perfwne

19 Chemistry I
SuffiX

a Second
hand
Quechuan
Indian
Station
West
Pointer

Yesterday't Auwer

Edwards

~"!~e

~~C u

i5 a fraud!

1 Director, -

9 Spiritual
resort

u set

right
U Sole

supports
Zl - sauce
22 "- the
master
ol my
fate "
(2 wds.)

!3 Most
profound
%4 Dickens
heroine
Z5 Spy talk
%7 Conceal
U Snake
31 Foreigner
32 Jeweled
headband
3'1 - had It!
38 Rarlliii'V

:-+-+-+-

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cR-NO-ITI3 10 A PERSDrVAL.
:::&gt;nr::- U-C~C4-M- __.1"LI'L.. ABNER AND
tf?oa.e 71/ffli%8
ITS-t:=R-MORE
~
time in
PERSONAL.
7?1af2Paris

r

w~

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ml&lt;id Ma

.

r·/J
f!Y

'

33.

11 :30-Johnny CarlOn M,15; Rookies 6.13; U.S. 0P.tn
Tennis Highlights I ; Mary Hartman 10; ABC NeWII
33.
1us-Movie "The Disorderly Ot-dorly" 1.
12 :DO-Movto " Night Must Fall" 10; Janakl 33.
12:4(&gt;.-Don Kirshner's Rock Conart 4; Wrestling 13
1·DO-Midnlglghf Special 3,.4,15.
1. 4(&gt;.-News 13.
2·30-News 3.
3:DO-Movto "Scudda·Hool Scudda·Hayl" 3
• .»-Movie " Lancer Spy" 3.
6:DO-Movle "The Period Snob" 3.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER It, 1976
6:DO-Summer Semester 10.
6·»-Fun for EveryontJ 6; Summer Semnler I ;
Treehouse Club tO; Kentucky Afield 13.
?.DO-Saturday Report 3; AG·USAA; Eddie Saundorl
6; TroehoustCiub8; U.S. Farm Report 10; Groovle
Goolles 13.
7·30-Bullwlnkle 3; Cartoont .4; Vlilty of 1M
Dinosaurs 6; Harlem Globetrotters Popcorn
Machine 8; Man from C.O.S. I. 10; Make A Wllh 13;
Mister Rogers 20.
8:DO-Woody Woodpecker 3;.4,15; Tom and JerryGrape Ape6,13; Sylvester and Tweety 1,10; StMrne
Street 20.
8·30-Pink Panther 3,.4,15; Bugs Bunny-Road RIHIMI'
B; Bugs Bunny and Frlendl 10.
9·DO-Jabberlaw 13; Big Blue Marble 6; Electric
Company 20.
9.30-Scooby·Ooo-Oynomuft 6,13; Tarzan 8,10; Mister
Roget'S 20.
10:oo-McDufl. the Talking Dog 3,•.15; Shazaml·lsls
10; Zoom 20.
10.30-Monster Squad 3,4,t5; Kroflt Supershow 6,13;.
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
lt :DO-Land of the Lost 3,4,15; Ark II 1,10; Inner
Tennis 20.
11 :30-Big John, Little John 3••• 15; Club Club 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.

a.

t2 :DO-Klds from C.A.P.E.R. 3,.4,15; Hot Dog 6; Fit
Albert 8,10; Action News lor Kids 13; Crockett'•
VIctory Garden 20.
12:3o-Ara's Sports World 3; American Bandltand 13;
Muggsy 4,15; Soul Train 6; . Way Out Games 81
Gomer Pyle. USMC 10.
t :DO-Star Trek 3; Champions .4; Children's Film
Festival 8, 10; Wrestling 15; Lowell Thomat
Remembers 33.
1:30-Thal Good Ole Nashville Music 6; lrontlde 131
I
Wild, Wild World of Animals 33.
2:DO-Marshall Football Highlights 3. Treasure Hunt I
4; Ara's Sports World 6; Grandsfand 15; Film 8;
Urben League 10; Family Theatre 33.
2:1s-Baseball15
2:30-Wido World of Sporls6, 13; Adam-12 A; Wildlife In
Crisis 10; VIewpoint 8; Insight 33 .
2:35 - NFL Game of the WHk 3.
3:DO-Baseball Warm-Up • : U.S. Open Tennla 1.10;
Family At War 33.
3·1s--Baseb311 3, •.
• ot&gt;--College Football Pre-Game Show 6,t3; Bit With
Kntl 33.
• :ll-College Footbell 6, 13.
• :»-Food Preserving 33.
5:DO-WrestllnQ t5; Romagnolls' Table 33.
5:»-Muslc Projed Presents 33.
5:&amp;-Green Acres 3; Scoreboard •·
5:5s--Polltlcal Program B,10.
6 DO-News 3••• B. 10; God Has The An&amp;wer 15;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 33.
6·»-NBC News 3,.4,15; Rhoda 8; CBS News 10; Lilla,
Yoga and You 33.
7:DO-World at War 3; Lawrence Welk •·15; Hee Hew
8; Price Is Rtghl10k; Rivals of Sherlock Holmes 33.
7 30-Trea•ure Hunt 3; News 6; Last of the Wild 101
Nashville 'on the Road 13
8 DO-Emergency! 3,.,15;
Shark .Terror, Death.
Truth 6,13; Jefferson• 8, 10; AI The Top 33.
B 30-Movle "The New Original Wonclor Woman" 6, 13;
Ivan the Terrible 8,10.
9:DO-Perry Como 3,.4,15; Mary Tyler Nv:Jore 8,101 ;
Upstairs, Downstairs 33.
9 30-Bob Newhart 8, tO
10·DO-Miss America Pageant 3,•, 15; Hee Haw 6; Pilot
8,10; Don Adams Screen Test 13; Youth In Troublt
33
10.5s--Polltlcal Program B, 10
ll.DO-ABC News 6; News B,10,13; Janakl 33.
11 1s--Movle 6
11 :3o-Movle " Denver &amp; Rio Grande •• 8; Waady
nayes · Football 10; Movie " The Man Who Cried
Wolf" 13.
'12 DO-Movie " The Heroes of Telemark" 10.
12 1s--PMA Pulse 15.
,
12 :30-Mary Hariman, Mary Hartman 3; Saturday
Night 4,15.
! ·DO-Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman 3; Sammy and
Company 6; Don Klr!hner·s Rock Concert 8. Movie
" The Monolllh Monsters" 13.
1.»--Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman 3
2.oo-Mary Hartman, Mary Hariman 3.
2 »-Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman 3; ABC News 13.
3 DO-News 3.
3 30--Movle " Moonllde" 3.
5 DO-Movie " Conllrm or Deny" 3
6·DO-Movle "He Hired lhe Boss" 3.

, ,;n:J;;;:;,:~~==::j

Tf-H5 WAY-

9:oo-Movlt " Medici I Story" 3,.4, 15; Movie "Brl_.'
4,t3; U.S. A. People &amp; Pollllct 20.33.
9:30-Movle " C.C and Company" 1,10; Anwlclll
Indian : A Qulot Rvotullon 20,33.
tO:DO-News 20; P1ul Nuchlms 33.
1t :DO-News 3,.4,6,8,10,13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report

u

Laver of
tennis
30 Devour

~W~M®f:o'::~..Jc

33 Apiece

Un11&lt;ramble the,. r..,r lumbl..,
one lett.er to each IM!uat&lt;, to
rorm four ordtn&amp;rJ wordt.

lt "Maria ''
3$ l:!oxlng
great ·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
is

AXYDLBAAXIt
LONGFELLOW

One teller simply stands for another In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for lhc two O's, etc Stnglc letters.
•rostrophes, !he Jen ~lh and formati?n of th e words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are d11ferent.

1

r

lJ I

•••
WHEN il-1150CC:UI&lt;!:5

ISPENOR±

II

ATW

AT A 50L.D MINE,
IT'S NOT APT 1D
. C'I5TUI\'f.!l THE.

80*·

RW

ATWDW PH KE BGDGIW.

LAFF - A - DAY

HAWDKW
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IF A MAN WORKS HARD AND
UVES RIGHT, HE CAN'T HOW HIMSElF BACK. -

GOODY··

\

ROCKY· BYE

I

1ATER,~ ,r

i IN TH"··

Beautiful day, eh. Haskins'"(
I

I

••'

•

HE FINALLV
DRAPPED OFF

TO SLEEP

LAWRENCE WELK
1'1 ' ' ' 1!'"1

HEV. CAT!
I SEE THE'I 'RE
li:EMAKIN&amp;
"KIN6KON6'

,.......,.,._,
Yetaerd•y~•

J• ....... .IULfP ABOUT GRASSY BURLAP

IAnlwen •w..t,..
dooe
'

1Dnlrl11'l UPfC.~GI!~" "'"o'•Mfl
s.lll.. z.,IIOio-STIJBIIL£
•.

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�•
12 - The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Friday Sept 10 1976

~~~~~~~~N

S PM
Cay
Before
Publ ce t on
Cancelli ions
correc
lons accepted t rs dey ol
pub l~ollon

~GMotch

spo smonCiub Storts at noon
Sunday Sep 5 and every Sun

d

wll no be rupons ble tor
m~;~, 0 ~an one ncorrec
RATES
ForW.antAdhrvlce
S c ents per wo d on e
nser on
M n mum Cha ge Sl 00
I.a cen s per word hree
consecut ve nser on s

ay

h

tt

• ·~ •

-

-

-

HA RTRANSPlANT Dr Rt ho d l

REGULATIONS

The Publisher rue ves
he r Oht o ed or elect
a ny ads doomed ob
lec t ono The oubl sher

fok. ; Run

Slack Pt Pleo•on W Vo Co I
(30&lt;) 675-5267

-lOOKING fOR A BETIER OP
PORTUN TY
? YOUR TAXES

SUPPORT ONE
R 0 G onde
College Commun y College
FaiiRegstaon Sep
13
1976 All en}olal 9AM 9PM

SHOOTiNGMArcHe;-.'. , Sundov'
1us off Rf 7by pass Sat nga
12 noon

- - ' - - - - --::--d:-:dk tans contoc Fre
26 cen s per word s •
h
de
S
consecut ve nser ons
Houdos e11 398 Grant t Ml
"25 Pe Cent 0 sc:oun OJ'
dlepor
pa d ads and ads pa d R_U
..:M
:::M
= AG
=E-~
, o""'le-:S-I-:P~ou-:1, -::
Un-:1-ed
w hln 10 deWS
CARD OF THANKS
MethOO st Chu th Annew Tup
&amp; DB TUARY
pes Pons Sept 9 h u I h
$200 to
50
word
930om o,.pm
FREE

m n m0m

Eac h add tonal wo d 3
en ts
BLINPAPS
Add 1 on a 2' 5c Cha ge
pe Adve semen
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m o 5 00 p m
Da ly 8 30 a m o l2 oo
Noon Sa u day
Phone tooay 992 '1 56

·-"--'----''-'---::--::-::---::

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classi
Rei! EstmlOr-salf acr~ a~
Business Services
~=====-~

KVB'fRI Hll ~ '"dence n Ra e AVERAGE $40 on evan ng o
F do,- Sepl 10 sto 1 ng ot 9
afte noons demonstra ng
am Sotu day Sept 1 star ng
guo on eed Oys and g ft1 No
o Cil am w lh bake sole Span

Ir---------.,
MEIGS I
1
I

Equ1'pment Co,

lfJ l 10 2tc

I

I

II
I

By Ann B watson
Dtputy Clerk

1

1
I

New 1c1t1

Equipment
Chlln

I

74
MALIBU

Service

................. ...

WE NEED
EAR CORN

CALl US TODAY

992-2181

I

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

---

FREE ESTIMATES

Alummum Sidmg,
Gutters,
Patnting and Repatr

--

AL TROMM alNST

TEAFORD

RM:INE
CARPET SHOP

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'6.95

..

Aulo
PB

"

7l

AUDI

UPHOLSTERY

DIRECT FABRIC SALES

73

2495

1

72
GALAX IE

2 dr

GLEN

HT

'1795

White red
lnt sharp

•4795

'3495

7l

7l

JAVELIN

LEMANS

V8
PS

auto
PB

,

HI-LO SHAG
'16.95

SALE
One good uud Gtbson
coppertone Side by stde Make us an oHer
Good
used
refrtgeratar

G E
S200

One good used Homellle EZ
Cham S..w
SlOO
One good used Homeltte
Super XL Chain S..w S200

•.
!-•4 landmlik
lllii&amp;•acaw c Mtr

-Hii111

50 Acre farm 5 room house ou

bu td ngs fru t lrHs 2 loco
t ons made for oil and gas
wells own wote system on
good block op road Co Bill
Clonch 9'12 5795
6 room hous~~t mod7e~
n 7k"tchen
carpeting in Ho risonv lie con
venienl to m n•• $9 000
Phone 742 2796
• rooms and both n Cheste
V lloge Phono '192 7~
FARM fa sole 68 oc;re1 6 ooma
ond bo h F A fu noce lull
basemen Cal 992 3630 o
7•2 2 80
VACANT LOT 50x100 • h Sl
Sy OCUS8 Phone 992 5•98
NEW HOME totol e ec c 3
bedroom full corre
I 113
oc es leodlng C Hk wa e
syst«n n:~tar Longsv I e and
mines Col 742 2819

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

NEW LISTING 1 3 acres farm 80 acres Ill abe
land n ce 2 story farm house 7 rooms &amp; bath al
hardwood f oors and basement Barn and other
outbuildings 2 ponds An ce aylng farm priced to go
L~ated near Chester call for appt
NEW LISTING -

Ever dream of owning your own

golfccurse' Here s your chance for you or your fr ends
to own a n ce roll ng golf course 55 acres 9 greens

n ce modern club house oufbu ldlng with all spraying
and seeding equipment needs some mowing and a
I It e repa r work on golf course Th s could be
purchased with t he 13 acres lsted above and
developed Info a beautiful 18 hole go f course ca I for
appt
POMEROY Mulberry Avenue l ~a l on Two
vlng room kllchen and dining area 1 ,
bedroom
baths Large back porch priced to sell $9 100
COOLVILLE - Nice mod brick home COI'llaln ng three
bedrooms d nlng room I vlng roorn with f replace full
bosernent wlfh garage arge front porch nat gas
furnace Clfy water and well wafer a beaut ful home
wllh approx 5 ' acres of land fru I lrees and shade
trees surrounding t P enty of garden space good
fishing area close by ocated n Coolville Ohio Priced
at only S32 000 Ca I now
TUPPEIIS PLAt NS - 101 acres of rolling land all
mineral rights approx 10 acres t liable land some
pasture land and timber good lake s te Modern 1 ,
story house re&lt;:ently ref nlshed on Ins de all carpeted
except kitchen coni a nlng 3 bedroom dining room and
basement 2 car garage Ntce l~allon on Co Rd 46
close fo Tuppers Plains Ohio Priced for quick sale
$32 000 Call for appoint
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY
AND NEED YOUR LISTING
&lt;.ALL JIMMY DEEMm 2388

CARPENTER floo ng ce I ng
pone! og Phone 9'12 2759
BUILDING remodel n9 and
epa 1 Qvo ty wo k effie en t
se v ce Jesse Rodman phone
9'12 5980
DOZER work and weld ng Con
tact James Parsons Rt 1
Roc ne on Co mel Road
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER - lARGE AND SMA(l
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS 811(
PUll NS PHONE 9'12 2&lt;78 DAY
Oft NIGHT

501 NYlDN

Greep gold red b ue ru~l
Do
I yourself
with
padding $7 95 sq yd
Wtlh podding Installed
S8 95square yord
CALL 742 2lll
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPEJ CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
142 2211

.:.:.;,__:---'~--

iiif
Ui
••••
•••

ii~•W•

5 ••
•••

Mon

Tues , Wed
800ttl500

•

• •
•

Thursday 811112 noon

9

~
;

:

:
•

..

: FRIDAY TIL 8
•• •

.
···••••••··
Close Sat At 5 p m

••

.· ~·

RUnAND FURNRURE
742 2211

•tr.•• I

ARN"OLD oUH

I 9 I I 8

llU'tLAND

~

~

~~'•
~

a 8 • • I tee I tteeet • ••

Supreme
Loaded'

n

IMP

7l

NOVA

'2695

"2895

'2795

73
98

73
SA TEL
LITE
V8 auto
PS
PB

OLDS

7)

ELECTRA

NOVA

71

"1995

71 SCAMP

69
AIR

69

6 cyl auto

'1695

'1595

PS

VT

RIVERSIDE V.W.

4 dr

sed

'695

JEEP

Commando
l ots
of
extras
1

ThiS price alsotnclude• labor 6 cyl thea per Have your work done by
a certtfled mechamc This of/er good through all of Seplemb&lt;tr Bring
IIUs coupon wllh you and get a fret! wash job

'2595

'3395

2 dr H T
grn whf

New fuel filter

sed
tam ly car

'2395
BEL

New plugs
New pomfs

4 dr

3595

1

Get your car luned up at Smith Nelson and have It tn
WOd •hape for the Wtnler ahead You get the following
work for the very low pnce of Sl4 95 Regular P"Ce
54) 9!

7l LTD

6 cyl auto

3495
IMP

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

EKira
sharp
loaded

4 dr local
owner

the
A II
goodies I

71

FALL TUNE UP SPECIAL
7l REGAL

VT

2 dr H T
loaded
1

2 dr H T

PS

VT

NEW
CAR~c,

~.f

1995

AMC~JEEP

"FORMERLY DON WAnS V.W."

you ootsteps and come out
equa ly as we
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Past expe lences ha11e been an
mpo tant but proficient
teacher for you You w II p of t
g eat y loday by yesterdays
m s takes

LIBRA (Sep! 23 Oct 23) t w

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

AstraGraph

Bem ce Bode Osol
For Soturdoy s.pt 11 tt78

197! PINTO WAGON
$2895
Loco! carandonly6 600 miles 4 cyl aulornatlc trans
power steering tinted glass luggage rack radio
rad al w w tires clean
$1695
1972 NOVA2 DOOR
Local 1 owner car good I res c eon nlerlor 6 cyl std
trans

1969V W 2DR
Runs g!&gt;Od new tires radio

$595

ARIES (Morch 21 April 1t)
You e a competen pe son
but f someth ng comes up .that
you cant hand e don t fee d s

g aced by lett ng someone
mo e sk lied take ove

TAURVS (April 20 Moy 20)
P an the seed but once you
have sta led natu e on ts
cou se have fa th n o he s o
fo ow th ough n the ways God
has n ended

GEMINI (Mey 21 Juno 20)
You op t m sm s we founded
today You have set a good e•
amp e Others w to ow 11

LEGAL NOTICE
I hereby authorize far sale
the follow ng descr bed real
~state

The following described
premises situated n the
Township of Sa Is bury County
of Mtlas and Stote of Ohio
Beginning n Sect on 3
Town 2 Renae 13 Beg nning
at th, Northwest corner of the
Northeast quarter of sa d
Section No 3 thtnce South •o
chalnt apd 40 links more or
less to the Southwest corner of
sa d quarter section at the
county rood leading from
Pomeroy to Chester thence
fOllowing sold rood In a North
easterly direction to the west
line of the fends of William
thtnct North 29
Corleton
degrees 65 links to the North
line of ta ld Soc:t on th once
Wosl on tho Norlh line of sold
Section 7 chains and 84llnks to
the pace of beginning con
talnfng 28 " acres more or
leu save and exupt ftom the
above described prem ses he
fOllowing described froct or
parcel to wit
Beginning at the Northwtst
corner or the Northeast
quarter of Section No 3
lhenct Soulh 700 feel thence
East 7 chatns •nd 8.. Inks to a
sloke fhtnce North 700 teet to
lhe '4orth 1 no ot said section
thence West on ttle North I ne
of teld Sect on 7 Chi ns an&lt;l u
llnkslo the flace of beginning
Olso excep all lht coal un
derlylng the above descr bed
prem 1111 and the exc us ve
r ght In perpetully to mine ond
remove said coal and to use at
all times so much of the
surface as The Mart n Eben
bach Company Its succnsors
and assigns may deem
necenerv to ope,n operate
and equip a compete coal
ly
with
m nlng
bulldlngt
lroad sw t
1
lood
SOld

the r ght same hav ng a
radius of 2825 fee t a d stance
ot 78 teet more or less o a
point 40 feet from lind at right
angles to Stat on 99 50 hence
n a Northerly d rect on 0 teet
to a point 50 feet from and at
r ght angles to Stat on 99 50
thence fol ow ng sa t1 cu ve to
the right same hev ng a
adlus of 2815 feet a d s ence
of 281 teet more or less o a
point n the property line be
tween G T Carleton et a
and A 0 end Lll on Sm th
said point be ng SO feet from
and et r ght angles to station
96 69
thence
fol owing
property lne In a sou her y
direction 150 feet more or ess
to the place of beglnn ng I Is
understood that til e !trip of
land above descr bed s not to
be In excess of 50 feet n width
and contains 0 96 acres more
or ess of wh ch the present
road occup es 0 •a acres more
or less Also save and except
the fol owing parce
Beg nnlng a a point n the
property lne between G T
Carleton et a
and John
Lyons said pont being 40 feet
from and at right ang es to
Station 104 o n the center line
of survey made by he
Department of H gtlways
thence 1"1 a Northeasterly
direct on In said property line
and n the center of the Old
road 90 fee more or less o a
point n sa d property ne at
Station 10,. 4 thence n a
Nottheaste v direct on 57 feet
more or less o a po nt •o feet
from and at r ght a(lg es to
Station
104 AS
thence
fo lowing a curve to the left
same having a rad us of 1472
feet a dis a nee of A7 5 feet to
ttle place ot beg nn no as
shown on the plans on file n
the office of the Depa rt ment of
Highways n Columbus Ohio
It Is understood that the strip
of and above c:lescr bed s not
In excess of 40 teet In w dth
and conte ns 10 acres more
o ess of wh ch he present
roed occupies 01acres more
or less And being the same
property
conveyed
by
MalColm c Ro ler et ot tow
F Harless by deed dated 10
25 31 and recorded In Vo H8
at PcYge ,... of the Deed
Records Meigs County Ohio
The said W F Harless does
hereby excef?t and reser ve
unto h mself t11s he r$ and
assigns the fu I one halt In
terest n al the oil and gas
royalty wh ch mer be derived
trom the production of ol and
gas
on
the
pre mises
hereinabove described Ex
cept the oil and gas on the
ebove prem ses w th the r ght
to operate and produ ce same
Reference Deed Vol 225
Page9 7 D(!ed Records Me os
County Oh o
Slid reel estate 5 I sted on
the tax dupl cate aa belnv
20 so acre•
Said ule s to be conducted
at court House s teps In
Pomeroy Oh o on the 2nd dav
of October 1976 and sho not
be sold tor en than two thirds
of the opprolttd velut The
appralud volue '' S18 ))3 33
lmmedletely to lowing sad
sole 1 ern offer ng for sole the
penone property ncludlng
all r ght tit e and nterest now
owned by Cardlna
En
ttrpr ses Inc n and o an
Ohio State Liquor Perm t for
holltat thon two thirds of the
approlsed pr ce The op
J~fllltd price of the personal
property nct~dlng the quor
perm It Is 52 500 00
Said re•l estate hes been

PUBLIC NOTICE
The follow ng documents were
rece ved or prepared by he
Oh o
Env ronmen al
Protect on Agency during he
prev ous wee!(
Anyone
aggr eved or adiJersely af
tected by Issuance denla
mod f cation revoce t on or
renewal of any perm t(s )
1 cense( sl or var ance s
may request an ldiud cat on
hear ng by written reques
pursuant to Oh o Re v sed Code
Secl on 3745 07 with n h r t y
(30) Clays of the directors
proposed action to Issue or
deny such donuments tha
statute does not provide for
hear ng requests to he OEPA
on applications complain ts
verlf ed com pta nts orders or
f nal act ons
W th n lO doys of pub cat on
In a newspaper In the affected
coun y any person mav also
(1) submit wr ten comm en ts
re at ng to actions proposed
ac Ions
compla nts
or
ver f e&lt;l complaints
(2)
reques a publ c meeting
regarding proposed actions
and o (3) reques no Ice of
further
actions
or
proceed ngs
Flna act ons to Issue denv
mod fy revoke or renew
perm ts
licenses
or
va r ances that are not
preceded by propose&lt;! actions
may be appea ed to the En
vlronmental Board of Rev ew
Su e 305 395 east Broad
Stree Columbus Ohio ,.3216
All such final actions are so
ldentlf ed In th s not ce All
other requests tor ad
tudlcat on hearings and other
communications concern ng
pub c
hear ngs
public
meet ngs
adlud cation
hearings camp elnts of any
kind and regulations should
be addressed to the Legal
Records Section Oh o EPA
P 0 BoK 10~9 Columbus
Ohio 43216 (61&lt;1 466 6037
Unless otherw se sta ed In
pert cular notices al other
communications Inc udlng
comments on propoaed ac
tons and requests for f)Ub lc
mee lngs should be addressed
either to the New Source Air
or NPOES Perm t Records
Sect on wh ch ever s ap
proprlate a the Ohio EPA P
0 Box 1049 Co urn bus Oh o
43216
Appl cat on renewal for air
perm t to operate Co Gas
Trans Crp Lebanon Com
pressor Sta R 0 1 Portl and
Oh o App lcotlon NO l SI
0653000024 8008
Imperia E ectr c Company
3•5
Sycamor e
Stree
M llersport Oh o Appl cat on
No&lt;•l 0653000026 R001
ls,uence of Certltlcatton
VIllage of Middleport M d
d eport Issuance of Cer
llflcallon for Slep 1 Con
strucf on Grant
910 ltC
known as the Shenang Spr ings
property The real estate Is
loca ed on the West s de of
Ohio Slole Ro•le No 7
Said sa e of he rea
property
and
rersonal
property IS sublec o the
approval of the Court of
Common
Pitas
Me_!jts
Countv Oh o
I CARSON CROW
RECE VER OF CARDINAL
ENTERPRISES INC
(91)10 1724
no1 1 5tc

DAN THOMPSON
FORD
NO REASONABLE

LED (July 23 Aug 22) You
chances fo success today w
be g eatly enhanced I you
make haste caul ous y Be
ca etul not o put he ca 1
befo e the ho se
VIRGO (Autl 23 Sopl 22) You
can be nst umen al tod ay n
help ng anoth e ate a
bus ness s tua t on ot sma
p om se
nlo somet h ng
benet c a to both of you

NaN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT!
195 UPPER RIVER
2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

TRUCKS

New con d

loaded I

2 dr cpa
sharp!

UV()~

'3595

'2795

GUTTER SERVICE·

•&gt;

74
CUTLASS

EKtra
sharp
loaded

s

DARt

Loaded
with extras

Southeastern Oh10
Truss Rafter Co

FREE ESTIMATES'

AC

CVTLASS
V 8 auto
p
p8

100LS
auto
&amp;un
roof

7~

PS

VT

z•J4

Amencan
Auto Sales

,~I !'

New Management!
Entirely New Used Car Inventory!
Clost{)ut sawngs on new 76's!

M&amp;G TI1JSS..RaftetS

..IIISaws
_________1
McCulloch

l

LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER!

sored by Cons ant Bu de s
cash
ment no del ~o~ery o NEW
bedroom
house 2 baths
------------------------------~
co ec nves
t ng Compu e ~ do .,-ou
all 3elet
1 ocre M ddlepo
Clou of Roc ne Me hod st Chur
pope
wo
k
Coli
9•9
2803
o
c
ose
Au
lon.d
Phone
m
0
ch
992 'm.7 _,Also book ng pa es
UBI
!A
INDOOR yo d sole 186 N 2nd AVERAGE $40 on even ng o
NOTICE
Mdd opol 9:10 un I &lt;:tO
ofte noons dltmonsl of ng
Optn lor' Foil &amp; Wlnltr
Sep 3 and 14 An que1 fur
Radiator ...-~
guo on eed toys ond g f s No
St•son
Mondoy lhru
n h.1 e Avons
temt fa
Specializing
In
custom
buill
cosh nvestment no de very o
S1IUrd1y
10
to
S
odul 1 ch ld en and nfon 1
rafters for commerclol
collecting Compute 1 do ,-ou
~• hlvt one trten house
tools elect c and plumb ng
resd pole buildings
pope work Coli 949 2803 o COUNfAY fo mlond w th !tclud
full of Florida folio,•
,,. 1111 Mill
tams m K
plants Over JO v•rletl•• .~
ed wood• wo e and good ac
99'1 'm1 Also booking par es
~
1111 From • to 1 potl &amp; 6
cess n Mon oe Coun ,- W VQ
PORCH Sola 10 a m o 5 p m SOMEONE to do yo d wo k
to
10
htnglnt
b••lceh
7Sc
Phone Coolvtlle
$ 000 down co 130&lt;) 772
f doy ond Solurdoy 660 H gh
to U 00
Phone
3 02 0 (3()1)772 3227
S eel M dd epo 1 Many n ce
667 3166
p ecos of gloss as well os ser
3 bed oom house fo sole ot 520
or
_ 11 ce for 8 Everyday wa e
S,-camo e S M dd epo good
667 3876
buy fo $8 000 Phono WI 3578
LOCUST POSTS round o sp t
0
992
7667
For Free Estimate
Phane 949 217~
fft 1771
hriCUit 0 .
COAL mes one and calcium HOUSE fo •ale 3 bed ooms all
9 2 I mo
9 10 1 mo
PLEASURE ho ses and pon es
e eel c Fam ly oom tv ly
chlo de and calc um b lne fo
Also w II do t a n ng Phone
co pe ed with wood bu n ng
dust con of and spec: al m x ng
f eploce lo gelot w th s o age
(61&lt;) 6'18 3290 Ruth Reeves
soh fo fo mes ManS ee
bu ld ng ond go den Si=!Oce
Pome oy Oh o or phone 992
Rust c; H Us S,- ocuse Phone
3891
Blown
9'12 7836
CANN NG oma oes and swe&amp;t
Roof1ng,
1nsut1tton
Services
peppe s Cleland Fa ms 2- bed o;-; - age mode n k I
finonclft&amp;lv•loblo
chen lo ced o fu noce ll
Ge ad ne Cleland
Roc n•
coin H s Phone 992 5737
Bloorn olo II~ l lAHKl
Oho
Racme Oh1o
- ---:c--:-SlORN
The Complete
20
acre
fa
m
w
h
pond
ba
n
1971 HONDA Cl•SO
2 000
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
smoke house and cello p Ul
m es s ssy bo c osh ba s
Remodeling Service
I MAlE POODLE 1 year 1 mo1
R!'IAU,ENI
opp
e
o
cho
d
and
peoch
ees
pull bock hQndle bo s new e
o d house
alned $50 00
For Your Home
Also on prope ty: 2 sto y
WINDOWS
and s.a s Scramble s de
Phone 9&lt;9 2498 ol e &lt; :tOp m
house
2
years
old
doub
e
w
de
p pes $6SO Co 19&lt;9 2•ao
ALUMINUM
~
AUSTRAliAN Shephe d pups
ole on County Road 18 All
SIDING-SOFJin
N
DASH
23
chonne
CB
om
fm
guo an eed hee ers
For
fo $29 000 Phone 9'12 7590
Rutland
742 2ll8
GUm~WIIINGS
mpx ad o 3 ack s e 8Q Call
Square Yard lnstalt.d
trade- reg ste ed Suffolk om
All Work Gunanleed
m
3965
for one of equal vo ue J m No
Parsons
LARRl,~~V~~DER
Free Esllmales
y Che y Rdge Rd Rt 3 SHOT 1hells f esh stock All
949
~23 2 mo
Ph 1923993 ~IOimo
8 22 I
Pome oy
b ands H gh powe ed S3 83
pe box Target loads $3 22
V rg1l B Sr Realtor
Magnum 52 60 Lo11g t es 79
110 Methantc Pomeroy 0
cents deer slugs Sl 45 Ova
PO[Y.fOAM
Phone99l m~
200 used and new guns com
1970 Bu ck Riv e o good cond
pound and c ol5bows. lowe5t
DRIVE IN
Equ pmenl
on now t res $900 Phone
FABRIC
pr ce5 onr,where No deale s
bu ld ng and land On y
For sofa cha r cushions
please F es 7113 d St Md
742 27.'-96
"-------,$ 0 500
ANY PITCH
matlres es paddln~ Ideal
dlepo Phone 9'12_?&lt;9_&lt;_ _
1971 Mercury Mon ego p s p b
for
campers
Var
ely
of
ANY SIZE
W1nsh eld Replacement
o r ve y n ce S 295 Phon• KENNEBEC pola oos SO lb $3 SO
• BEDROOMS - Large
sttes
Free Estimates
G en 8 sse I 9.f9 2801 or 9•9
o 100 lb. $6 00 Br ng con
doub e I v ng w lh gas
Velvets
nylon prints
On Body Work
a ne s Phone 667 3737 o
.. :-::::
2860
:::::-'-7--:--:---::----;f rep ace Cook and bake
herculons vinyl solids and
667 397&lt;
Expert Patnltng
ps pb
fancy prmts accessor es
un ts d n ng basement &amp;
lnsur1nce Work
o a s of ch ome eal sharp SCHOO
garage S20 000
ow m leage S 395 Phone
Welcome
MODERN - 3 bedrooms 2
Box28 A
S nge
feo urs bu onhole
:128 Main Slreel
G en 8 sse I 9,.9 2801 or 949
St Rt 7
bl nd hem sews on kn ts
ceram c t le baths copper
Rutland
Ohio 45775
PI Pleasanl
2860
$48 00 cash Also S nger Touch
Coolv1lle Oh1o
plumb ng fu ll basement
Ph
&lt;mlm
2409
Ph m 3469
and Sew I ke new $31 00 cash
w!&gt;Od burn ng I replace a nd
667 3127
1974 JEEP Renegade Phone 992
We
Deliver
9 30 s 00 Dally
Phone 992 7187
dbl garage 134000
1 29 1 mo
:US 1 am o8pm or 992
Tlll8 000 Fridays
REASONABLE
3
3597
WARM Mo n ng cool stove and
bedrooms
Ol'
l
e
f
ocr
a
ge
Stoke
ma
c
s.
ove
Phone
H2
19H P NTO
2300 mo lo
I vlng 2 porches ca po &amp;
3 51
BRING
ou omot c 2 one po n .., nyl
You can save hundreds
large ol 112 000
COMMERCIAL
TO YOUR
op 28 (OJ m e$ P ced at
even
thousands
of
dollars
PHOTOGRAPHY
VICTUALS
You can ea
who esale Phone 7,.2 2'028
Rev ve the
wtth alumtnum or v1nyl
Ae al - lndut.tr al
by own ng th s place Has a
of
your rugs 'cllleaned
std
ng
1975 FORO F 250 • wheel dt ve
Construct on Progress
bedroom bath &amp; garden
your own home
Com
piE!te
Schoo
Serv
ce
w II
ode fo 7.4 75 2 whH I
s 5 500
by Von Schrader
Undergraduate &amp;
d ve p ck..,p Phone 992 3427
S ACRES - Some fenced 5
dry
foam method
Element ary
ofte 6p m
CONTACT
room home sma I barn
No muss No fuss
School Package Ptcfures
1973 CHEVEllE SS • lvor w lh
nat gas T P water and
Sen ors &amp; Yearbook
No odor Use the
R BISSEll
ba ck v ny
n er Q
ve GREEN beans conning omatoes modern k I $16 500
- Wedd ngssame day
au omo c PS PB sw ve
ADS DRAW LOOKERS
AT949 2801
P ck yov own br ng con
All work
bucket seats Rally wheels
BIJT SALESMEN SELL
tolna
s
Phone
2•1
2852
o
An
guaranteed
OR
KEN
GROVER
33 000 actual m les $2400 00
CALL US TO GET RID OF
drew Crass le o 1 Foils Oil o
Phone 9'12 2280
949 2860
HEADACHES
IN
Photog aphy
SELLING
I%6 fAlCON S W 6 cyl std A~ BEDROOM fu n lure double bed
PLEASE
9154155
dre-sse n gilt stand dress ng
$295 00 See ol 2j7 Mu b4t ry
NO SUNDAY CALLS
Chester Oh o
table
chest
of
d
owe
s
b
ch
Pomeroy
a 18 1 mo
B 9·76 I mOI'lth
f n sh Coli 1 667 374 even
1%8 COUGAR 302 automat c
ngs
excellent cond t on 1957 Fo d
n excellent
one and half ton p ckup 7,.2 COUCH and cho
cQnd on w th 1 p cove $
2821 ahe 5 p m
$ SO 00 Coli 9'12 7725 Cool&lt;
SOlAR DEAlERSW.O.NTED
1968 FORO PKkup t uck Phone
BRADFORD Auct onee
Com
Gop HII
BUSINESSMEN ond o n e esred
2•7 3551
pie e Serv ce Phone 949 2487
nd " duo s We a e now se 1 ng
JERSEY m lk cow good fom ly
or 9•9 2000 Roc ne Oh o C tt
MAIN
up Dea ersh ps n Oh o o
cow 63 n id ng mare horse
Brodlo d
ma ket t~ur r"!tw Solo Fu noce
rabb $ oil s zes and colo s
Conllnuous one pttce l
POMEROY 0
ElWOOD
BOWERS REPAIR
Ou A F ome back yo d styled
f om 50 a $3 00 Phone 985
gutters We hang tl or do It
Sweepe s oas e s ons oil
fu noce {s z.e of oo shed) $fa
•27~ Gory R D II
CAMPER Starcrcrlt Galax 8 w th
yourself Spectaf prices to
RUTLAND - LOVELY
small opp ances lawn mowe
most e x sting home$ as well as
own ng Phone 992 251.C
builders
nex to S Q e H ghwoy Go age
INSIDE
2 large
new homes Fu no a eto Is fo
on Rou e 7 Phone (614) 985
$2 S•S
Dea e sh p p ce
bedrooms both ut I ty R
Phone 949 2814
3825
$2 873 fo demonst oto fu
d ne In kllchen carpeted
9AMto5PM
nace so es eng nee ng t a n REMODEliNG Plumb ng heat n9
paneled basement porch
ng handbooks and other
and ol ypes of gene ol epa r
level lot You rnust see th s
neceuo
y mo e a In reply ng
Work guo onteed 20 years ex
992 7320 Evenmgs
$12 000 00
to h s ad s ate county n
per ence Phone 992 24109
OVERLOOKSTHE
RIVER
te e5 ed n No expe ence
3 AND .C RM fu n shed and un
3 bedrooms bath
8 22 1mo
an To ge 0&amp;0 TREE Tr mm ng 20 years ex
necesso y we w
furn shed apfs Phone 992
p e ence
In su re d free
carpeted pane ed storaae.
S EGLER 70 000 BTU automat t:
at he start of a demond ng
SUI
es t motes Call 992 238.4 or
contra w h blowe
space
bu ld ng carport porch
lem phone (614) 77S 3269 o
(6 698 7257 A bony
..,.r e SOlAR I SUN TRAP P
hea e 667 3063 at Tuppe~s
MIDDLEPORT - Large
Plains
0
Bow:
"
Ch
co
he
Oh
o
brick &amp; fr ame I corner
SEWING MACHINE Repo s se
•560
loll
4
apartmenl5
v ce o makes 992 2284 The PROTECT you owlmm ng pod I
W nter t inO k ts CO'olel's an
Fabr c Shop
Pome ov
furn ished Ivein one rent 3
f eeze se vice fa t~bove or
Autho zed S nge Soles and
and pay off th e mortgage
n g ound po~ls 0 Bumgard
ONE bed oom opar ments at
Se
v
ce
We
sha
pen
Sc
sso
s
cl ose
to
shopping
ner So es M ddlepo
Ohio
VIllAGE MANOR n M ddlopott
MOBILE 11ome fo
$25 800 00
EXCAVATING dozer loode ond
Phone 9'12 5724
for $10-4 monthly plus elec or 1975 SUZUK T S &lt;00 I o I ond
bed oom s al
bockhoe wo k dump t ucks
RUTLAND Lead ng
st H bke 1500 m les Ike
$130 ncludlng electr c LOWER
Phone992
7751
and
o boys fo h e w haul DITCH 0 gg n~ Phone (304) 773
new
eason
for
sell
ng
went
Creek
1
72
acres
mostly
n
RATES fOR SENIOR CITIZENS
5839 o (304 I 773 5788
fill
dlr
o so I I mes one ond
ave seoa Phone 991 7527 o
Conven ent to shapp ng on
awn deal for home or
7x60 w h nle o des gned on
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
9925522
Thrd and MilS eels n Md
two levels ghted beams n v
!ratter S3 300 00
fers day phone 992 7089
dlepo t Brand new h gh qual
ng
oom
ce
ling
and
othe
REEDSVILLE - Rt 661
n ghl phone 992 3525 o 9'12
SAVE ON
ly apartments See tJ,e
feo u es $5000 00 p ce n
135 acres 100 acres has all
5232
manager at Apt 16 or call
eludes
o
cond
I oner under
minerals
close
lo
9927721
pnnng smo poch a fu
CARPETING
recreation good hunting
n tu e app ances d apes and
AVAilABlE ot Rve s d. Apo I
some timber S16 600 130
ugs Phone' 9'12 5169
menls 1 bed oom apo t
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
menls $100 pe month 2
BUYERS FOR NEWER
bed oom apo tments $133 per
SEPTIC Systems nstalled by
INSTALLED
HOMES - LET US SELL
month One pr ce fa a Phone
I censed nstalle
Shepo d
YOURS
Regulor$14
9S
9923273
Con a« o s Phone 7.42 2.f09
3 5 and 10 gal stone ar1 o the
HENRY
E
CLELAND
W ll 00 baby s tl ng n my home
Odds ond Ends Shap Phone
BROKER
Sq Yd
Con g ve good cha acte SEPTIC TANKS deanod Modern
W/6173
Sanlto1 on 992 3954 o 9'9'2
efe ences Phone H2 3063
992 2259 or
Everyday
money
2428
5 oom fu n shed apt lor rent 1 POLLED Hereford bull 7 mon hs
Good chotce colors
-:------:c-----o d $ SO 00 Coll7&lt;2 2523
close to Powells Super Va u
Phone 9'12 3658
12 or 15 Ft

RUMMAGE SALE 06 Br ck S ott
But e nut n o e Sept 9 10
ond 1 h 9om I do k
ABSOLUTELY no hun ng ~fore
season o du ng season ort
Jacob Boe p ope ty n Nease
Sell Iemen
AUCTION Fr day n ght 7 p m a
Auc on House Ho on St
Mason W Vc Lois of new and
NOTICES
u~&amp;d me chond se
ATTN I
ALL HOUSEW VES
POMEROY TRASH I now hove o
A. Yard Sa es Rummage
pe m t top ckup ash We con
Porch and Basemen Po ch
no
come o you If you wan
and Basement Sa les e c
us o pck up you I ash you
must be pad n advance
can call VI o 992 5715 o 992
Ge vou s n ea y by
3305 but emembe we can
s opp ng b y ou off ce a
The Oa ly Sen ne
11
no come o you You hove lo
Cour S or wr ng Box
co I us low ence Man ey
129 Pome ov Oh o -45769
SElOON Res Carom cs Tuppers
w h your em t ~tnce
Pia ns Oh o open ng Sept 13
Classes Monday 1 to l 0
Tuesday 9 o 12 I o.f 7 to
10 Thu sdoy I to .f- 7 to 0
PUBLIC NOTICE
d scount to Sen o Cl zens Call
TO EL THA STANS BURY
6/J7 2252 fo class rase va ons
MUSTARD If vng whose
address s unknown
TO ALDA J EASTERDAY
addr!5s unknown
TO EDGARD WHEELER
add ess unknown
LOST n M ddleporl b own male
TO
PEARL BEN NETT
4 mos 0 d Ge man Shephe d
add ess Unknown
s very s ck and unde dodo s
TO Lo 1t Seybond addre5$
core If found please ca 992
unknown
7269
TO Luel a Dav s address
unknown
TO Ru h wr nkelman ad
dreu unknown
TO Lott e Gask II address
unknown
TO Lule Wheeler address
vnknown
TO Ross w Gaskill address
unknown
TO Ra Ph Hoi er address
unknown
TO THE VN KNOWN HEIRS
DEVISEES
LEGATEES
ADM N STRATORS
AND
ASS GNS OF EL THA STAN S
BURY
MUSTARD
f
decea s ed
ROBERT w 1976 CHEVROLET • whee d ve
uck P hone 9~9 2132
STA NSBURY f deceased
LO TTIE
GASK ILL
If
deceased M NNIE HOLLER
f
deceased
FLOYD
EASTERDAY
f deceased
LULA
WHEELER
f
deceased
ZAD A HENRY
deceased
EVA J PARR
deceased
GEORGE H
STAN S SUR Y
deceased
JAMES W STA NSBURY
deceased
EMERSON E
STANDBURY
oeceased
VALINDA
EASTERDAY
deceased SARAH R STA NS
SU R Y deceosed AN DREW
S STANSBURY c:leceased
ANN A SMITH STANSBURY
dec eased NETTIE RO SS
deceased
EARL
RO SS OLD furn u e ce bous b ass
de ceased
CORA
B
beds woll elephones and
EASTERDAY deceas!Mi and
po ts o compl" households
E~VA
B WELL NGTON
Wr
e M D M I e R .c
deceased
Pome-roy
Oh o Co 1992 nw
You are he e by not f ed tha
you have been nam ed CASH pa d fo all makes and
defendants n a egal act on
models of mob le homes
ent tied Rober ta C 0 Br en vs
Phoneo eacode6H 423 9531
George Collins Treasu er of
Meg~ County
et al Th s TIMIU Pome oy Forest P o
action has been assigned Case
ducts Top p ce for stand ng
No
6 222 n the common
saw mb&amp; Call Kent Hanby
Pleas Court of Meigs County
I &lt;~6 8570
OhiO &lt;5769
The Ob jec t of he camp aint COINS 1929 and older cu rency
s to determ ne he rs and
go d and s lve sc ap W II buy
par t on real estate descr bed
o de Hove a good select on
as follows s tua ed n 01 ve
of coins to sell or trade A so
Townsh p Me gs coun y
Oh o
have suppl 11 and metal
Be ng n Sect on 35 Town 3
de ecors Rogl'r WaMsl•y On
Range 11 of the Oh o Com
lead ng C eek and Rutland
pany s Purchase and be ng
Rood Phone U2 2331 fo on of
he southeast quarter of the
fer
northwnt quarter of sal&lt;l
sect on and be ng descr bed $$CASH$$ fo 1unkod oulos
n Sarah R Stansbury sw I as
Phone 7,.2 2061 Frye 1 Tuck &amp;
the upper term on the north
Auto Po h Rutland
s de of Sllade R ver con
tan ng seventy 70) acres SUBMERS BlE wolo pump w th
more or less and being
p euu e onk and cant ols
describe-d in the- Me gs County
Cal 1 378 6223 o w lie G ant
Aud tors Oupl lca1es as south
Smith 8o;JC 93 Reedsv lie
east of northwest • con
Oho
lain ng so acres more or ess
You are requ ed to answer
the COmpla nt with n 28 days
after the last publ cat on of
h s no te wh ch w I be
PUbl shed once each wee k fo
s )( consecu t ve weeks The
as t publ cat on w be maGe
on 0~ 1 e 1976 ond the 21 IF YOU hove a 1erv ce to olfe
days for answer w II start on
wont to buy o sell someth ng
thet date
oe ooklng lor work
o
n case of you fa lure to
whateve
yov II gel esults
ans.wer or otnerw se re$pond
taste w th o Sent nel Want Ad
as required by the Oh o Ru es
of c v I Procedure udament
Co11992 2151&gt;
by defaul wilt be rendered
aga nst
you for rei ef SIX FAMil V yord solo Soot
8 9 10 11 3 and one half miles
demanjjed ln th s cam p a nt
LARRY E SPENCER
E of Tuppe s Pia ns on Rt 681
C erk Of Courts
V c o Bah residence Rain o
Com man P eas Cou t
sh ne Watch for s gns
Mt'igs county Oh o
YARD SAlE Wed Thundoy and
(9)) 10 17 2• (1011 8 61&lt;
Fr day 9 a m o .f p m laurel
Cl ff ol end of W llow Crook Rd
Signs posted
2 Bedroom mobile home n Roc ne
YARD SALE f rst ood on eft pas
area Phone 99'l 5858
WMPO Thu sdoy fr day 10
&lt; ROOMS and bo h ut lity oom
om ! Sp m
NOTICE ON FILING
also smo I 3 room house and
OF INVENTORY
YARD SAlE Thu sdoy Fr doy ond
bath Bo h completely furnl1h
AND APPRAISEMEI'IT
Satu day Ve y n ce cloth ng
od
Phone 992 5630
Tht Stott of Ohio Meigs
sam• Bee ne m acellaneous
County Court of Common
terns cha r small table rod o
Plell Probtte Division
Sw nee came 0 0 IQ 1969 Ford
To the E:JCecutor of the
Tor no P ced nry r.atonoble
ntefe to auch of the tol ow ng
Loco on I lncon Hll Rd
IS ere res den s of the Statt of
Ohio v z - the surv v ng
Pame oy Oh o For further n
~oust the next of k n the
fo mot on on tems phone
beneficiaries under the will
9'12 5524
•nd to the attorney or at
torneys represent ng any of YARD SAlE f ldoy Sept 10 10 BLACK MARE pony $30 00 or
the tfortmentloned persons
a m o 4 p m torner Rt 7 and
equal YO ue refrlg•ro or
Bernice Darst De ceased
Co Rd 26 F ve Points M Her
$25 00 Phono 9•9 2179
Pomoroy Oh io Sal isbu ry
man Wt~mens M u onorv
Townll'tlp No 21172
Assn
You •n hereby notlt ed that
t he Inventory and Ap
pralatmenl of the estate of the
aforementioned
deceaaed
11te of said County was In lhls
Courl Sold lnvontory
Appraisement
wll be ond
for
heorl . . bolero thlo Court on
th• 17th Clay of Stptembtr
1976 of 10 flO o clock A M
Any person dH ring to file
exceptrons thereto must file 1
1
lhom •lltlll flvo days prior lo
POMEROY 0
mo dele sof tor hear ng
PH 992 2176
Given Under my hand and
1111 of ttld cour1 thlt llst dty
of Augusl 1976
International
Manning D Wtl&gt;tfer
IHarvestw
Judgo
~

HOMESITES fo sale 1
up Mtddlepo I neo Ru land
Call 992 7,.81

10 IV/6

be up to you today to show
mo e n tat ve than your

pa tne n an mpo ten t matter
o jo nt conce n

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nav 22)
Because you be amb t ous to
day nan a ea whe e othe s ts
o ge off the d me the on s
sha e ol the spo s w II be
you s

SAG ITT ARtUS ('4ov 23 Doc:
21) n ac vtes whee I ends
a e nvo ved you have o pu
you se f out a I t1 e m o e than
usua f everyone s to have a
good t me

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jon
19) You have the facu ty oday
o nsp re one you love to lace
aM ove come a p ob em that s
had h m down Be a booste
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob 19)
s tl n-g on p ans Do
some h ng aboul them now
befo e t me uns out
PISCES (Fob 20 Morch 20)
Th s should be a mate a v
ewa d ng day fo yo u f you
play you ca ds ght Be w ng
to wo k fo what you hdpe to
ga n
Stop

~Your

~Birthday

OFFER REFUSED
ON NEW OR USED
CARS OR TRUCKS
•

The Closer You Look, The Better
We Look

1971 Ford Maverick 2 Dr.••••••••• '1695
Br ght red very n1ce

19n Volkswagen Beetle •••••••••••• '1795
low mileage

1973 Chevy Vega 2 Dr••••••••••••• 51495
Ole owner 11ery clean

1973 MercuJY Mootego •••••••••••• '2995
1974 Ford Grand Tonno 4 Dr••••••• 52795
C ean ns de and out

1974 Ford Mavenck 4 Dr••••••••••• 52795
A r auto

show room dean

ps

1972 Chevrolet Imp. 2 Dr•••••••••••'2195
One local owner

1972 Ford Grand Sport Tonno •••••• '1995
Auto trans a r P s
1974 Chevy 1h Ton P1ckup ••••••••• 53395
6 cyl

who no onge
vc n y

es des n you

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs Herbert Rousb
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Yeago of Letart W Va were
Sunday guests of Mr and
Mrs Andrew Cross
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Roush Sharon Roush attended an aU day meeting
and baptizing Sunday at
Maple Wood Lake
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Roush spent Sunday af
ternoon with Rev and Mrs
0 G McKinney at Maple
Wood Lake Rev McKinney
preached at the Nazarene
Church at Belpre Sunday
evemng where the Rev Bob
Stewart IS pastor
Donme and Gregory
0 Bnen of GallipoliS VISited
Mr and Mrs Larry 0 Brien
and children while the1r
father Mike 0 Br1en was a
heart patient at University
HOSpital Columbus
Rex 0 Bnen father of
Larry 0 Brien IS a patient at
Holzer Medical Center where
he suffered a h•art attack
Mrs 0 Brien ls staying WJill
Larry and fam1ly dunng h1s
hospitalization
Mr and Mrs Jack Ables
and son Paul spent Lhe
weekend with MISS VIcki
Ables at Canal Winchester
Mr and Mrs Ables attended
the Ohio Slate Fa1r
Columbus Sunday
Paul Ables was an appendecltis patient at Holzer
Medical Center He hed
surgery Tuesday and was
discharged Thursday
Mrs Icte Tucker (a former
resident) had the IDlsfortune
of falling at her home In Leon
W Va
breaking her
shoulder
Mrs J1m Fife and children
of Cheshire were Sunday
evening guests of Mrs Till
Webb
Mr and Mrs C E Blakes
lee of Pomeroy spent Sunday

CAR$
1975 Chevrolet Vega Wagon, 4 cyl ,
auto trans , factory a1r
52295
1974 Ford Grand Tormo, 4 dr sedan,
factory a1r P S , P B , vmyl
roof
52595
1974 Chevy Monte Carlo, 350 V 8,
automatic, factory air r p I p B ,
vmyl roof, with sun roof, swing out
bucket seats, AM FM stereo radial
t1res Local owner and sharp $4200
1973 Ford L TO 4 dr , factory atr,
P S , P B , vmyl roof tilt
wheel
52495
1973 Chevy Impala 4 dr, factory air,
P S P B vinly roof
$2495
1973 Dodge Polara CusTom, 4 dr
sedan factory a1r P ~ , P B , v1nyl
roof radtal tires A mce fam1ly
car
$1995
1973 Bu1ck LeSabre Custom, 4 dr
H T , factory a1r, P S , P B , vmyl
roof
$2795
1973 Olds Delta 88, 4 dr , H T ,
factory a1r, P S , P B , vmyl roof
Clean
$1995
1973 Ply Sat Custom, 4 dr , sedan,
factory a1r automatiC, P S , P B
vmyl roof clean
$1995
1972 Vega, 4 cyl
factory a1r,
hatchback
$1195
1972 Plymouth, 2 dr
H r,
auto trans factory a1r
$1495
1972 Pontiac Lemans 2 dr coupe 6
cyl automatic P S
$1695
1972 Olds Toronado Custom, one
owner &amp; loaded
$1995
1972 Pmto Statton Wagon, 4 cyl ,
automatiC
$1395

s

I

"Good Selection of
Cheaper Cars In Stock."

std lrans

Sopt 11 1976
Some h ng advantageous to
you may be ofle ed you h s
yea from.. a d s ant source II
cou d come th oug h a person

1975 Ford Super Cab, long wti:le bed,
12 000 mtles L1ke new
$3495
1974 Ford F 100, 6 cyl standard
trans , long wtde bed
$2495
1973 Ford F 100 Custom, 6 cyl
standard trans , long wtde bed $2495
1973 Chevrolet 112 Ton Truck, 350 V 8
engme stand trans , long wide bed,
radial ttres Sharp
$2495
1972 Ford Econohne Van, 302 V 8,
long wheel base, partly finished
lnstde
$2000

1969 Ford Bronco
1971 Ford Tonno
1965 BuiCk 4 Dr

1970 Dodge Dart 2 Dr
1971 Chevy 4 Dr

RIGGS USED CARS
RO!I er R1 ebe I

AND MANY MORE
See Pat Htll Rocky Hupp
or Melvtn L1Hie
Open Evenmgs Tll7 00
Except Th urs and Sat

Closed sunday

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

Middleport

Mrs Butcher who recently
moved to the farm they
purchased from Mrs Pearl
Norns Mrs Morns has
moved to her mobile home on
the DarreU Noms farm
Mr and Mrs Hersehel
Norris spent Sunday evening
with Mrs Pearl NorriS
Mrs
Chester Durst
grandsons Ronme Cox Ntles
0 Craig Reeder Mineral
Ridge Mrs Dorsa Parsons
called on Mr and Mrs
Herbert Roush Saturday
Mr and Mrs Everette
Parsons and daughters
Karen Ruth Cathy Kay of
Negley 0 spent Tuesday
evemng wl th Mr and Mrs
Herbert Roush They spent a
week s vacation at their farm
on TalUiers Run and also
VISlted his molher Mrs Rutll
Parsons Mrs Edna Parsons
and Mark Preston Parsons
AStanley party will be held
at the church annex Sept 14
Evelyn Holter Is the hostess
Time730pm
Mrs rlorence Smith was
lay speaker at the Morning
Star Church Sunday morning
Mr and Mrs Robert Smith
Sr visited Mr and Mrs Jim
Freeman Erwm Pa Mr
and Mrs Joe Oerouln Mr
and Mrs Bob Srt Ill Jr Mr
and Mrs Billy S mth aU of
M1llv1lle Pa Mr and Mrs
Martin
Deroum
at
Clanngton P~
Mr and Mrs J m Heaton of

Case Farm Tractor, 4 sp trarts ,
3 pomthttch
$675

~fdidle!~ort have moved to the
Jay
residence purchased
from Mr and Mrs RusseU
Quillen
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
Balser and fam1ly of Tuppers
Pla1ns were Sunday guests of
Mrs Alice Balser Mr and
Mrs Carroll Balser spent
Saturday tiU Tuesday Wlth
Mrs Balser
Attending the State Fall' at
Columbus were Mr and Mrs
DaDas Hill and Dean Mr and
Mrs MarshaU Roush and
Joey Mrs Dolly Wolfe Mr
and Mrs Carl Wolfe Jr and
children Mr and Mrs
Darrell Norris and Tracy
The WSCS of the local
church purchased carpet and
chall's for tlle alUieX
Dale WaUace HJU of Moore
Haven Fla amved for an
mdeflmte visit with his
brother Mr and Mrs MIII'Vln
Hill and family on Bashan

Rd

Mr and Mrs Don BeU
spent a few days with Lorna
Bell at Columbus Don attended the Ohio State Fair
Mr and Mrs Don Bell left
Saturday for a vacation at
Vlrgima Beach
George Hupp of Portland (a
former resident) Is confined
to Veterans Memonal
Hospital after havmg
surgery Mr and Mrs Arnold
Hupp are asslatlng m h1s
care
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Roush Mrs lvn Orr were
I

Located 3n St Rl

985

41 00

7

Ray Rtggs
Olester 0

Carpenter Personals
~

Murl Galaway attended the
wedding of her great
grandson James Petty to
Tammy Riley Botll live at
McArthur and the wedding
was at the Nazarene Church
there
Guests of Mrs Chancey
Staneart were her daughters
and famUles mcludlng Mr
and Mrs Scott Leeds
(Maxine) Charles Scott
Rita and Diane Rockledge
Florida and Mr and Mrs M
L Patterson (Mary) Betty
Ann Debbie and Michael
Oxen Hill Maryland This
reunion was plalUied as the
family had not heen together
for se~eral years The Pat
tersons were enroute to
Mtssourl where
their
daughter Betty enroUed m a
Baptist CoUege there
Mr and Mrs Dennis
Facemeyer and children and
Mrs Dwaine Jordan and
Keith attended the Cln
crnnati Reds hall game at
Rl\erfront Stadmm on
Sunday This trip was
sponsored for the Lit tle
League baD team that the
boys belong to for players
and thell' fanulies
Mr and Mrs Robert
Mattox spent Sunday 10
Fairborn Ohio where they
vlslted her brother-In law ana
stsler Mr and Mrs John
Fout
The Woodrum family who
formerly lived in the com
munlty had their annual
reuruon at Lake Hope State
Park on Sunday Murl
Galaway attended with her
shopping at the Silver Bridge
Plaza Friday evening They
aU visited Mr and Mrs Dana
Lewis Cllrton Salurday
evemng

son-In law and daughter Mr
and Mrs Leon Woodrum of
McArthur and reported a
good attendance
Laura Krebs and mother
Mrs Maude Holcomb along
With her aunt Ruth Swisher
Radcliff took a trip thrOlJI!h
southern United States
traveling to Ft Worth
DaUas Texas area where
they visited a slster-m.Jaw
Gwendolyn
Roach at
Arlington Tex and a sister s
m law mother Mrs Gladys
McWhorter Lockh8rt Texas
and then traveled down along
the Texas coast before
returning home
Mr and Mrs John Culwell
Columbus spent Sunday with
his brother and sister·ID law
Mr and Mrs William
CuiweD
Reverend and Mrs Davld
W1seman Jana Rene Evan
David and Owen Earl
Woodsfield Ohio have been
vacationing With relatives in
tllls area and spent some time
with his grandparents Mr
and Mrs Earl Starkey

NEW YORK (UPI) Hard-hitting Ernie Shavers
wtll meet veteran boxer
Henry Clark in a 10-round
battle of heavyweights in a
scheduled prel!mlnary to the
Muhammad Ali Ken Norton
fight world heavyweight
championship fight Tuesday
September 28 at Yankee
Stad1wn
Shavers who has won 49 of
his 51 career victories by
knockouts will fight Clark a
12-year veLeran of tlle ring
w1tl1 a wm over knockout
spectahst Jeff Merntt

l

�•
12 - The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Friday Sept 10 1976

~~~~~~~~N

S PM
Cay
Before
Publ ce t on
Cancelli ions
correc
lons accepted t rs dey ol
pub l~ollon

~GMotch

spo smonCiub Storts at noon
Sunday Sep 5 and every Sun

d

wll no be rupons ble tor
m~;~, 0 ~an one ncorrec
RATES
ForW.antAdhrvlce
S c ents per wo d on e
nser on
M n mum Cha ge Sl 00
I.a cen s per word hree
consecut ve nser on s

ay

h

tt

• ·~ •

-

-

-

HA RTRANSPlANT Dr Rt ho d l

REGULATIONS

The Publisher rue ves
he r Oht o ed or elect
a ny ads doomed ob
lec t ono The oubl sher

fok. ; Run

Slack Pt Pleo•on W Vo Co I
(30&lt;) 675-5267

-lOOKING fOR A BETIER OP
PORTUN TY
? YOUR TAXES

SUPPORT ONE
R 0 G onde
College Commun y College
FaiiRegstaon Sep
13
1976 All en}olal 9AM 9PM

SHOOTiNGMArcHe;-.'. , Sundov'
1us off Rf 7by pass Sat nga
12 noon

- - ' - - - - --::--d:-:dk tans contoc Fre
26 cen s per word s •
h
de
S
consecut ve nser ons
Houdos e11 398 Grant t Ml
"25 Pe Cent 0 sc:oun OJ'
dlepor
pa d ads and ads pa d R_U
..:M
:::M
= AG
=E-~
, o""'le-:S-I-:P~ou-:1, -::
Un-:1-ed
w hln 10 deWS
CARD OF THANKS
MethOO st Chu th Annew Tup
&amp; DB TUARY
pes Pons Sept 9 h u I h
$200 to
50
word
930om o,.pm
FREE

m n m0m

Eac h add tonal wo d 3
en ts
BLINPAPS
Add 1 on a 2' 5c Cha ge
pe Adve semen
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m o 5 00 p m
Da ly 8 30 a m o l2 oo
Noon Sa u day
Phone tooay 992 '1 56

·-"--'----''-'---::--::-::---::

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classi
Rei! EstmlOr-salf acr~ a~
Business Services
~=====-~

KVB'fRI Hll ~ '"dence n Ra e AVERAGE $40 on evan ng o
F do,- Sepl 10 sto 1 ng ot 9
afte noons demonstra ng
am Sotu day Sept 1 star ng
guo on eed Oys and g ft1 No
o Cil am w lh bake sole Span

Ir---------.,
MEIGS I
1
I

Equ1'pment Co,

lfJ l 10 2tc

I

I

II
I

By Ann B watson
Dtputy Clerk

1

1
I

New 1c1t1

Equipment
Chlln

I

74
MALIBU

Service

................. ...

WE NEED
EAR CORN

CALl US TODAY

992-2181

I

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

---

FREE ESTIMATES

Alummum Sidmg,
Gutters,
Patnting and Repatr

--

AL TROMM alNST

TEAFORD

RM:INE
CARPET SHOP

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'6.95

..

Aulo
PB

"

7l

AUDI

UPHOLSTERY

DIRECT FABRIC SALES

73

2495

1

72
GALAX IE

2 dr

GLEN

HT

'1795

White red
lnt sharp

•4795

'3495

7l

7l

JAVELIN

LEMANS

V8
PS

auto
PB

,

HI-LO SHAG
'16.95

SALE
One good uud Gtbson
coppertone Side by stde Make us an oHer
Good
used
refrtgeratar

G E
S200

One good used Homellle EZ
Cham S..w
SlOO
One good used Homeltte
Super XL Chain S..w S200

•.
!-•4 landmlik
lllii&amp;•acaw c Mtr

-Hii111

50 Acre farm 5 room house ou

bu td ngs fru t lrHs 2 loco
t ons made for oil and gas
wells own wote system on
good block op road Co Bill
Clonch 9'12 5795
6 room hous~~t mod7e~
n 7k"tchen
carpeting in Ho risonv lie con
venienl to m n•• $9 000
Phone 742 2796
• rooms and both n Cheste
V lloge Phono '192 7~
FARM fa sole 68 oc;re1 6 ooma
ond bo h F A fu noce lull
basemen Cal 992 3630 o
7•2 2 80
VACANT LOT 50x100 • h Sl
Sy OCUS8 Phone 992 5•98
NEW HOME totol e ec c 3
bedroom full corre
I 113
oc es leodlng C Hk wa e
syst«n n:~tar Longsv I e and
mines Col 742 2819

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

NEW LISTING 1 3 acres farm 80 acres Ill abe
land n ce 2 story farm house 7 rooms &amp; bath al
hardwood f oors and basement Barn and other
outbuildings 2 ponds An ce aylng farm priced to go
L~ated near Chester call for appt
NEW LISTING -

Ever dream of owning your own

golfccurse' Here s your chance for you or your fr ends
to own a n ce roll ng golf course 55 acres 9 greens

n ce modern club house oufbu ldlng with all spraying
and seeding equipment needs some mowing and a
I It e repa r work on golf course Th s could be
purchased with t he 13 acres lsted above and
developed Info a beautiful 18 hole go f course ca I for
appt
POMEROY Mulberry Avenue l ~a l on Two
vlng room kllchen and dining area 1 ,
bedroom
baths Large back porch priced to sell $9 100
COOLVILLE - Nice mod brick home COI'llaln ng three
bedrooms d nlng room I vlng roorn with f replace full
bosernent wlfh garage arge front porch nat gas
furnace Clfy water and well wafer a beaut ful home
wllh approx 5 ' acres of land fru I lrees and shade
trees surrounding t P enty of garden space good
fishing area close by ocated n Coolville Ohio Priced
at only S32 000 Ca I now
TUPPEIIS PLAt NS - 101 acres of rolling land all
mineral rights approx 10 acres t liable land some
pasture land and timber good lake s te Modern 1 ,
story house re&lt;:ently ref nlshed on Ins de all carpeted
except kitchen coni a nlng 3 bedroom dining room and
basement 2 car garage Ntce l~allon on Co Rd 46
close fo Tuppers Plains Ohio Priced for quick sale
$32 000 Call for appoint
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY
AND NEED YOUR LISTING
&lt;.ALL JIMMY DEEMm 2388

CARPENTER floo ng ce I ng
pone! og Phone 9'12 2759
BUILDING remodel n9 and
epa 1 Qvo ty wo k effie en t
se v ce Jesse Rodman phone
9'12 5980
DOZER work and weld ng Con
tact James Parsons Rt 1
Roc ne on Co mel Road
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER - lARGE AND SMA(l
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS 811(
PUll NS PHONE 9'12 2&lt;78 DAY
Oft NIGHT

501 NYlDN

Greep gold red b ue ru~l
Do
I yourself
with
padding $7 95 sq yd
Wtlh podding Installed
S8 95square yord
CALL 742 2lll
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPEJ CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
142 2211

.:.:.;,__:---'~--

iiif
Ui
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•••

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5 ••
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Mon

Tues , Wed
800ttl500

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Thursday 811112 noon

9

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Close Sat At 5 p m

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RUnAND FURNRURE
742 2211

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ARN"OLD oUH

I 9 I I 8

llU'tLAND

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Supreme
Loaded'

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IMP

7l

NOVA

'2695

"2895

'2795

73
98

73
SA TEL
LITE
V8 auto
PS
PB

OLDS

7)

ELECTRA

NOVA

71

"1995

71 SCAMP

69
AIR

69

6 cyl auto

'1695

'1595

PS

VT

RIVERSIDE V.W.

4 dr

sed

'695

JEEP

Commando
l ots
of
extras
1

ThiS price alsotnclude• labor 6 cyl thea per Have your work done by
a certtfled mechamc This of/er good through all of Seplemb&lt;tr Bring
IIUs coupon wllh you and get a fret! wash job

'2595

'3395

2 dr H T
grn whf

New fuel filter

sed
tam ly car

'2395
BEL

New plugs
New pomfs

4 dr

3595

1

Get your car luned up at Smith Nelson and have It tn
WOd •hape for the Wtnler ahead You get the following
work for the very low pnce of Sl4 95 Regular P"Ce
54) 9!

7l LTD

6 cyl auto

3495
IMP

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

EKira
sharp
loaded

4 dr local
owner

the
A II
goodies I

71

FALL TUNE UP SPECIAL
7l REGAL

VT

2 dr H T
loaded
1

2 dr H T

PS

VT

NEW
CAR~c,

~.f

1995

AMC~JEEP

"FORMERLY DON WAnS V.W."

you ootsteps and come out
equa ly as we
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Past expe lences ha11e been an
mpo tant but proficient
teacher for you You w II p of t
g eat y loday by yesterdays
m s takes

LIBRA (Sep! 23 Oct 23) t w

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

AstraGraph

Bem ce Bode Osol
For Soturdoy s.pt 11 tt78

197! PINTO WAGON
$2895
Loco! carandonly6 600 miles 4 cyl aulornatlc trans
power steering tinted glass luggage rack radio
rad al w w tires clean
$1695
1972 NOVA2 DOOR
Local 1 owner car good I res c eon nlerlor 6 cyl std
trans

1969V W 2DR
Runs g!&gt;Od new tires radio

$595

ARIES (Morch 21 April 1t)
You e a competen pe son
but f someth ng comes up .that
you cant hand e don t fee d s

g aced by lett ng someone
mo e sk lied take ove

TAURVS (April 20 Moy 20)
P an the seed but once you
have sta led natu e on ts
cou se have fa th n o he s o
fo ow th ough n the ways God
has n ended

GEMINI (Mey 21 Juno 20)
You op t m sm s we founded
today You have set a good e•
amp e Others w to ow 11

LEGAL NOTICE
I hereby authorize far sale
the follow ng descr bed real
~state

The following described
premises situated n the
Township of Sa Is bury County
of Mtlas and Stote of Ohio
Beginning n Sect on 3
Town 2 Renae 13 Beg nning
at th, Northwest corner of the
Northeast quarter of sa d
Section No 3 thtnce South •o
chalnt apd 40 links more or
less to the Southwest corner of
sa d quarter section at the
county rood leading from
Pomeroy to Chester thence
fOllowing sold rood In a North
easterly direction to the west
line of the fends of William
thtnct North 29
Corleton
degrees 65 links to the North
line of ta ld Soc:t on th once
Wosl on tho Norlh line of sold
Section 7 chains and 84llnks to
the pace of beginning con
talnfng 28 " acres more or
leu save and exupt ftom the
above described prem ses he
fOllowing described froct or
parcel to wit
Beginning at the Northwtst
corner or the Northeast
quarter of Section No 3
lhenct Soulh 700 feel thence
East 7 chatns •nd 8.. Inks to a
sloke fhtnce North 700 teet to
lhe '4orth 1 no ot said section
thence West on ttle North I ne
of teld Sect on 7 Chi ns an&lt;l u
llnkslo the flace of beginning
Olso excep all lht coal un
derlylng the above descr bed
prem 1111 and the exc us ve
r ght In perpetully to mine ond
remove said coal and to use at
all times so much of the
surface as The Mart n Eben
bach Company Its succnsors
and assigns may deem
necenerv to ope,n operate
and equip a compete coal
ly
with
m nlng
bulldlngt
lroad sw t
1
lood
SOld

the r ght same hav ng a
radius of 2825 fee t a d stance
ot 78 teet more or less o a
point 40 feet from lind at right
angles to Stat on 99 50 hence
n a Northerly d rect on 0 teet
to a point 50 feet from and at
r ght angles to Stat on 99 50
thence fol ow ng sa t1 cu ve to
the right same hev ng a
adlus of 2815 feet a d s ence
of 281 teet more or less o a
point n the property line be
tween G T Carleton et a
and A 0 end Lll on Sm th
said point be ng SO feet from
and et r ght angles to station
96 69
thence
fol owing
property lne In a sou her y
direction 150 feet more or ess
to the place of beglnn ng I Is
understood that til e !trip of
land above descr bed s not to
be In excess of 50 feet n width
and contains 0 96 acres more
or ess of wh ch the present
road occup es 0 •a acres more
or less Also save and except
the fol owing parce
Beg nnlng a a point n the
property lne between G T
Carleton et a
and John
Lyons said pont being 40 feet
from and at right ang es to
Station 104 o n the center line
of survey made by he
Department of H gtlways
thence 1"1 a Northeasterly
direct on In said property line
and n the center of the Old
road 90 fee more or less o a
point n sa d property ne at
Station 10,. 4 thence n a
Nottheaste v direct on 57 feet
more or less o a po nt •o feet
from and at r ght a(lg es to
Station
104 AS
thence
fo lowing a curve to the left
same having a rad us of 1472
feet a dis a nee of A7 5 feet to
ttle place ot beg nn no as
shown on the plans on file n
the office of the Depa rt ment of
Highways n Columbus Ohio
It Is understood that the strip
of and above c:lescr bed s not
In excess of 40 teet In w dth
and conte ns 10 acres more
o ess of wh ch he present
roed occupies 01acres more
or less And being the same
property
conveyed
by
MalColm c Ro ler et ot tow
F Harless by deed dated 10
25 31 and recorded In Vo H8
at PcYge ,... of the Deed
Records Meigs County Ohio
The said W F Harless does
hereby excef?t and reser ve
unto h mself t11s he r$ and
assigns the fu I one halt In
terest n al the oil and gas
royalty wh ch mer be derived
trom the production of ol and
gas
on
the
pre mises
hereinabove described Ex
cept the oil and gas on the
ebove prem ses w th the r ght
to operate and produ ce same
Reference Deed Vol 225
Page9 7 D(!ed Records Me os
County Oh o
Slid reel estate 5 I sted on
the tax dupl cate aa belnv
20 so acre•
Said ule s to be conducted
at court House s teps In
Pomeroy Oh o on the 2nd dav
of October 1976 and sho not
be sold tor en than two thirds
of the opprolttd velut The
appralud volue '' S18 ))3 33
lmmedletely to lowing sad
sole 1 ern offer ng for sole the
penone property ncludlng
all r ght tit e and nterest now
owned by Cardlna
En
ttrpr ses Inc n and o an
Ohio State Liquor Perm t for
holltat thon two thirds of the
approlsed pr ce The op
J~fllltd price of the personal
property nct~dlng the quor
perm It Is 52 500 00
Said re•l estate hes been

PUBLIC NOTICE
The follow ng documents were
rece ved or prepared by he
Oh o
Env ronmen al
Protect on Agency during he
prev ous wee!(
Anyone
aggr eved or adiJersely af
tected by Issuance denla
mod f cation revoce t on or
renewal of any perm t(s )
1 cense( sl or var ance s
may request an ldiud cat on
hear ng by written reques
pursuant to Oh o Re v sed Code
Secl on 3745 07 with n h r t y
(30) Clays of the directors
proposed action to Issue or
deny such donuments tha
statute does not provide for
hear ng requests to he OEPA
on applications complain ts
verlf ed com pta nts orders or
f nal act ons
W th n lO doys of pub cat on
In a newspaper In the affected
coun y any person mav also
(1) submit wr ten comm en ts
re at ng to actions proposed
ac Ions
compla nts
or
ver f e&lt;l complaints
(2)
reques a publ c meeting
regarding proposed actions
and o (3) reques no Ice of
further
actions
or
proceed ngs
Flna act ons to Issue denv
mod fy revoke or renew
perm ts
licenses
or
va r ances that are not
preceded by propose&lt;! actions
may be appea ed to the En
vlronmental Board of Rev ew
Su e 305 395 east Broad
Stree Columbus Ohio ,.3216
All such final actions are so
ldentlf ed In th s not ce All
other requests tor ad
tudlcat on hearings and other
communications concern ng
pub c
hear ngs
public
meet ngs
adlud cation
hearings camp elnts of any
kind and regulations should
be addressed to the Legal
Records Section Oh o EPA
P 0 BoK 10~9 Columbus
Ohio 43216 (61&lt;1 466 6037
Unless otherw se sta ed In
pert cular notices al other
communications Inc udlng
comments on propoaed ac
tons and requests for f)Ub lc
mee lngs should be addressed
either to the New Source Air
or NPOES Perm t Records
Sect on wh ch ever s ap
proprlate a the Ohio EPA P
0 Box 1049 Co urn bus Oh o
43216
Appl cat on renewal for air
perm t to operate Co Gas
Trans Crp Lebanon Com
pressor Sta R 0 1 Portl and
Oh o App lcotlon NO l SI
0653000024 8008
Imperia E ectr c Company
3•5
Sycamor e
Stree
M llersport Oh o Appl cat on
No&lt;•l 0653000026 R001
ls,uence of Certltlcatton
VIllage of Middleport M d
d eport Issuance of Cer
llflcallon for Slep 1 Con
strucf on Grant
910 ltC
known as the Shenang Spr ings
property The real estate Is
loca ed on the West s de of
Ohio Slole Ro•le No 7
Said sa e of he rea
property
and
rersonal
property IS sublec o the
approval of the Court of
Common
Pitas
Me_!jts
Countv Oh o
I CARSON CROW
RECE VER OF CARDINAL
ENTERPRISES INC
(91)10 1724
no1 1 5tc

DAN THOMPSON
FORD
NO REASONABLE

LED (July 23 Aug 22) You
chances fo success today w
be g eatly enhanced I you
make haste caul ous y Be
ca etul not o put he ca 1
befo e the ho se
VIRGO (Autl 23 Sopl 22) You
can be nst umen al tod ay n
help ng anoth e ate a
bus ness s tua t on ot sma
p om se
nlo somet h ng
benet c a to both of you

NaN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT!
195 UPPER RIVER
2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

TRUCKS

New con d

loaded I

2 dr cpa
sharp!

UV()~

'3595

'2795

GUTTER SERVICE·

•&gt;

74
CUTLASS

EKtra
sharp
loaded

s

DARt

Loaded
with extras

Southeastern Oh10
Truss Rafter Co

FREE ESTIMATES'

AC

CVTLASS
V 8 auto
p
p8

100LS
auto
&amp;un
roof

7~

PS

VT

z•J4

Amencan
Auto Sales

,~I !'

New Management!
Entirely New Used Car Inventory!
Clost{)ut sawngs on new 76's!

M&amp;G TI1JSS..RaftetS

..IIISaws
_________1
McCulloch

l

LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER!

sored by Cons ant Bu de s
cash
ment no del ~o~ery o NEW
bedroom
house 2 baths
------------------------------~
co ec nves
t ng Compu e ~ do .,-ou
all 3elet
1 ocre M ddlepo
Clou of Roc ne Me hod st Chur
pope
wo
k
Coli
9•9
2803
o
c
ose
Au
lon.d
Phone
m
0
ch
992 'm.7 _,Also book ng pa es
UBI
!A
INDOOR yo d sole 186 N 2nd AVERAGE $40 on even ng o
NOTICE
Mdd opol 9:10 un I &lt;:tO
ofte noons dltmonsl of ng
Optn lor' Foil &amp; Wlnltr
Sep 3 and 14 An que1 fur
Radiator ...-~
guo on eed toys ond g f s No
St•son
Mondoy lhru
n h.1 e Avons
temt fa
Specializing
In
custom
buill
cosh nvestment no de very o
S1IUrd1y
10
to
S
odul 1 ch ld en and nfon 1
rafters for commerclol
collecting Compute 1 do ,-ou
~• hlvt one trten house
tools elect c and plumb ng
resd pole buildings
pope work Coli 949 2803 o COUNfAY fo mlond w th !tclud
full of Florida folio,•
,,. 1111 Mill
tams m K
plants Over JO v•rletl•• .~
ed wood• wo e and good ac
99'1 'm1 Also booking par es
~
1111 From • to 1 potl &amp; 6
cess n Mon oe Coun ,- W VQ
PORCH Sola 10 a m o 5 p m SOMEONE to do yo d wo k
to
10
htnglnt
b••lceh
7Sc
Phone Coolvtlle
$ 000 down co 130&lt;) 772
f doy ond Solurdoy 660 H gh
to U 00
Phone
3 02 0 (3()1)772 3227
S eel M dd epo 1 Many n ce
667 3166
p ecos of gloss as well os ser
3 bed oom house fo sole ot 520
or
_ 11 ce for 8 Everyday wa e
S,-camo e S M dd epo good
667 3876
buy fo $8 000 Phono WI 3578
LOCUST POSTS round o sp t
0
992
7667
For Free Estimate
Phane 949 217~
fft 1771
hriCUit 0 .
COAL mes one and calcium HOUSE fo •ale 3 bed ooms all
9 2 I mo
9 10 1 mo
PLEASURE ho ses and pon es
e eel c Fam ly oom tv ly
chlo de and calc um b lne fo
Also w II do t a n ng Phone
co pe ed with wood bu n ng
dust con of and spec: al m x ng
f eploce lo gelot w th s o age
(61&lt;) 6'18 3290 Ruth Reeves
soh fo fo mes ManS ee
bu ld ng ond go den Si=!Oce
Pome oy Oh o or phone 992
Rust c; H Us S,- ocuse Phone
3891
Blown
9'12 7836
CANN NG oma oes and swe&amp;t
Roof1ng,
1nsut1tton
Services
peppe s Cleland Fa ms 2- bed o;-; - age mode n k I
finonclft&amp;lv•loblo
chen lo ced o fu noce ll
Ge ad ne Cleland
Roc n•
coin H s Phone 992 5737
Bloorn olo II~ l lAHKl
Oho
Racme Oh1o
- ---:c--:-SlORN
The Complete
20
acre
fa
m
w
h
pond
ba
n
1971 HONDA Cl•SO
2 000
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
smoke house and cello p Ul
m es s ssy bo c osh ba s
Remodeling Service
I MAlE POODLE 1 year 1 mo1
R!'IAU,ENI
opp
e
o
cho
d
and
peoch
ees
pull bock hQndle bo s new e
o d house
alned $50 00
For Your Home
Also on prope ty: 2 sto y
WINDOWS
and s.a s Scramble s de
Phone 9&lt;9 2498 ol e &lt; :tOp m
house
2
years
old
doub
e
w
de
p pes $6SO Co 19&lt;9 2•ao
ALUMINUM
~
AUSTRAliAN Shephe d pups
ole on County Road 18 All
SIDING-SOFJin
N
DASH
23
chonne
CB
om
fm
guo an eed hee ers
For
fo $29 000 Phone 9'12 7590
Rutland
742 2ll8
GUm~WIIINGS
mpx ad o 3 ack s e 8Q Call
Square Yard lnstalt.d
trade- reg ste ed Suffolk om
All Work Gunanleed
m
3965
for one of equal vo ue J m No
Parsons
LARRl,~~V~~DER
Free Esllmales
y Che y Rdge Rd Rt 3 SHOT 1hells f esh stock All
949
~23 2 mo
Ph 1923993 ~IOimo
8 22 I
Pome oy
b ands H gh powe ed S3 83
pe box Target loads $3 22
V rg1l B Sr Realtor
Magnum 52 60 Lo11g t es 79
110 Methantc Pomeroy 0
cents deer slugs Sl 45 Ova
PO[Y.fOAM
Phone99l m~
200 used and new guns com
1970 Bu ck Riv e o good cond
pound and c ol5bows. lowe5t
DRIVE IN
Equ pmenl
on now t res $900 Phone
FABRIC
pr ce5 onr,where No deale s
bu ld ng and land On y
For sofa cha r cushions
please F es 7113 d St Md
742 27.'-96
"-------,$ 0 500
ANY PITCH
matlres es paddln~ Ideal
dlepo Phone 9'12_?&lt;9_&lt;_ _
1971 Mercury Mon ego p s p b
for
campers
Var
ely
of
ANY SIZE
W1nsh eld Replacement
o r ve y n ce S 295 Phon• KENNEBEC pola oos SO lb $3 SO
• BEDROOMS - Large
sttes
Free Estimates
G en 8 sse I 9.f9 2801 or 9•9
o 100 lb. $6 00 Br ng con
doub e I v ng w lh gas
Velvets
nylon prints
On Body Work
a ne s Phone 667 3737 o
.. :-::::
2860
:::::-'-7--:--:---::----;f rep ace Cook and bake
herculons vinyl solids and
667 397&lt;
Expert Patnltng
ps pb
fancy prmts accessor es
un ts d n ng basement &amp;
lnsur1nce Work
o a s of ch ome eal sharp SCHOO
garage S20 000
ow m leage S 395 Phone
Welcome
MODERN - 3 bedrooms 2
Box28 A
S nge
feo urs bu onhole
:128 Main Slreel
G en 8 sse I 9,.9 2801 or 949
St Rt 7
bl nd hem sews on kn ts
ceram c t le baths copper
Rutland
Ohio 45775
PI Pleasanl
2860
$48 00 cash Also S nger Touch
Coolv1lle Oh1o
plumb ng fu ll basement
Ph
&lt;mlm
2409
Ph m 3469
and Sew I ke new $31 00 cash
w!&gt;Od burn ng I replace a nd
667 3127
1974 JEEP Renegade Phone 992
We
Deliver
9 30 s 00 Dally
Phone 992 7187
dbl garage 134000
1 29 1 mo
:US 1 am o8pm or 992
Tlll8 000 Fridays
REASONABLE
3
3597
WARM Mo n ng cool stove and
bedrooms
Ol'
l
e
f
ocr
a
ge
Stoke
ma
c
s.
ove
Phone
H2
19H P NTO
2300 mo lo
I vlng 2 porches ca po &amp;
3 51
BRING
ou omot c 2 one po n .., nyl
You can save hundreds
large ol 112 000
COMMERCIAL
TO YOUR
op 28 (OJ m e$ P ced at
even
thousands
of
dollars
PHOTOGRAPHY
VICTUALS
You can ea
who esale Phone 7,.2 2'028
Rev ve the
wtth alumtnum or v1nyl
Ae al - lndut.tr al
by own ng th s place Has a
of
your rugs 'cllleaned
std
ng
1975 FORO F 250 • wheel dt ve
Construct on Progress
bedroom bath &amp; garden
your own home
Com
piE!te
Schoo
Serv
ce
w II
ode fo 7.4 75 2 whH I
s 5 500
by Von Schrader
Undergraduate &amp;
d ve p ck..,p Phone 992 3427
S ACRES - Some fenced 5
dry
foam method
Element ary
ofte 6p m
CONTACT
room home sma I barn
No muss No fuss
School Package Ptcfures
1973 CHEVEllE SS • lvor w lh
nat gas T P water and
Sen ors &amp; Yearbook
No odor Use the
R BISSEll
ba ck v ny
n er Q
ve GREEN beans conning omatoes modern k I $16 500
- Wedd ngssame day
au omo c PS PB sw ve
ADS DRAW LOOKERS
AT949 2801
P ck yov own br ng con
All work
bucket seats Rally wheels
BIJT SALESMEN SELL
tolna
s
Phone
2•1
2852
o
An
guaranteed
OR
KEN
GROVER
33 000 actual m les $2400 00
CALL US TO GET RID OF
drew Crass le o 1 Foils Oil o
Phone 9'12 2280
949 2860
HEADACHES
IN
Photog aphy
SELLING
I%6 fAlCON S W 6 cyl std A~ BEDROOM fu n lure double bed
PLEASE
9154155
dre-sse n gilt stand dress ng
$295 00 See ol 2j7 Mu b4t ry
NO SUNDAY CALLS
Chester Oh o
table
chest
of
d
owe
s
b
ch
Pomeroy
a 18 1 mo
B 9·76 I mOI'lth
f n sh Coli 1 667 374 even
1%8 COUGAR 302 automat c
ngs
excellent cond t on 1957 Fo d
n excellent
one and half ton p ckup 7,.2 COUCH and cho
cQnd on w th 1 p cove $
2821 ahe 5 p m
$ SO 00 Coli 9'12 7725 Cool&lt;
SOlAR DEAlERSW.O.NTED
1968 FORO PKkup t uck Phone
BRADFORD Auct onee
Com
Gop HII
BUSINESSMEN ond o n e esred
2•7 3551
pie e Serv ce Phone 949 2487
nd " duo s We a e now se 1 ng
JERSEY m lk cow good fom ly
or 9•9 2000 Roc ne Oh o C tt
MAIN
up Dea ersh ps n Oh o o
cow 63 n id ng mare horse
Brodlo d
ma ket t~ur r"!tw Solo Fu noce
rabb $ oil s zes and colo s
Conllnuous one pttce l
POMEROY 0
ElWOOD
BOWERS REPAIR
Ou A F ome back yo d styled
f om 50 a $3 00 Phone 985
gutters We hang tl or do It
Sweepe s oas e s ons oil
fu noce {s z.e of oo shed) $fa
•27~ Gory R D II
CAMPER Starcrcrlt Galax 8 w th
yourself Spectaf prices to
RUTLAND - LOVELY
small opp ances lawn mowe
most e x sting home$ as well as
own ng Phone 992 251.C
builders
nex to S Q e H ghwoy Go age
INSIDE
2 large
new homes Fu no a eto Is fo
on Rou e 7 Phone (614) 985
$2 S•S
Dea e sh p p ce
bedrooms both ut I ty R
Phone 949 2814
3825
$2 873 fo demonst oto fu
d ne In kllchen carpeted
9AMto5PM
nace so es eng nee ng t a n REMODEliNG Plumb ng heat n9
paneled basement porch
ng handbooks and other
and ol ypes of gene ol epa r
level lot You rnust see th s
neceuo
y mo e a In reply ng
Work guo onteed 20 years ex
992 7320 Evenmgs
$12 000 00
to h s ad s ate county n
per ence Phone 992 24109
OVERLOOKSTHE
RIVER
te e5 ed n No expe ence
3 AND .C RM fu n shed and un
3 bedrooms bath
8 22 1mo
an To ge 0&amp;0 TREE Tr mm ng 20 years ex
necesso y we w
furn shed apfs Phone 992
p e ence
In su re d free
carpeted pane ed storaae.
S EGLER 70 000 BTU automat t:
at he start of a demond ng
SUI
es t motes Call 992 238.4 or
contra w h blowe
space
bu ld ng carport porch
lem phone (614) 77S 3269 o
(6 698 7257 A bony
..,.r e SOlAR I SUN TRAP P
hea e 667 3063 at Tuppe~s
MIDDLEPORT - Large
Plains
0
Bow:
"
Ch
co
he
Oh
o
brick &amp; fr ame I corner
SEWING MACHINE Repo s se
•560
loll
4
apartmenl5
v ce o makes 992 2284 The PROTECT you owlmm ng pod I
W nter t inO k ts CO'olel's an
Fabr c Shop
Pome ov
furn ished Ivein one rent 3
f eeze se vice fa t~bove or
Autho zed S nge Soles and
and pay off th e mortgage
n g ound po~ls 0 Bumgard
ONE bed oom opar ments at
Se
v
ce
We
sha
pen
Sc
sso
s
cl ose
to
shopping
ner So es M ddlepo
Ohio
VIllAGE MANOR n M ddlopott
MOBILE 11ome fo
$25 800 00
EXCAVATING dozer loode ond
Phone 9'12 5724
for $10-4 monthly plus elec or 1975 SUZUK T S &lt;00 I o I ond
bed oom s al
bockhoe wo k dump t ucks
RUTLAND Lead ng
st H bke 1500 m les Ike
$130 ncludlng electr c LOWER
Phone992
7751
and
o boys fo h e w haul DITCH 0 gg n~ Phone (304) 773
new
eason
for
sell
ng
went
Creek
1
72
acres
mostly
n
RATES fOR SENIOR CITIZENS
5839 o (304 I 773 5788
fill
dlr
o so I I mes one ond
ave seoa Phone 991 7527 o
Conven ent to shapp ng on
awn deal for home or
7x60 w h nle o des gned on
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
9925522
Thrd and MilS eels n Md
two levels ghted beams n v
!ratter S3 300 00
fers day phone 992 7089
dlepo t Brand new h gh qual
ng
oom
ce
ling
and
othe
REEDSVILLE - Rt 661
n ghl phone 992 3525 o 9'12
SAVE ON
ly apartments See tJ,e
feo u es $5000 00 p ce n
135 acres 100 acres has all
5232
manager at Apt 16 or call
eludes
o
cond
I oner under
minerals
close
lo
9927721
pnnng smo poch a fu
CARPETING
recreation good hunting
n tu e app ances d apes and
AVAilABlE ot Rve s d. Apo I
some timber S16 600 130
ugs Phone' 9'12 5169
menls 1 bed oom apo t
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
menls $100 pe month 2
BUYERS FOR NEWER
bed oom apo tments $133 per
SEPTIC Systems nstalled by
INSTALLED
HOMES - LET US SELL
month One pr ce fa a Phone
I censed nstalle
Shepo d
YOURS
Regulor$14
9S
9923273
Con a« o s Phone 7.42 2.f09
3 5 and 10 gal stone ar1 o the
HENRY
E
CLELAND
W ll 00 baby s tl ng n my home
Odds ond Ends Shap Phone
BROKER
Sq Yd
Con g ve good cha acte SEPTIC TANKS deanod Modern
W/6173
Sanlto1 on 992 3954 o 9'9'2
efe ences Phone H2 3063
992 2259 or
Everyday
money
2428
5 oom fu n shed apt lor rent 1 POLLED Hereford bull 7 mon hs
Good chotce colors
-:------:c-----o d $ SO 00 Coll7&lt;2 2523
close to Powells Super Va u
Phone 9'12 3658
12 or 15 Ft

RUMMAGE SALE 06 Br ck S ott
But e nut n o e Sept 9 10
ond 1 h 9om I do k
ABSOLUTELY no hun ng ~fore
season o du ng season ort
Jacob Boe p ope ty n Nease
Sell Iemen
AUCTION Fr day n ght 7 p m a
Auc on House Ho on St
Mason W Vc Lois of new and
NOTICES
u~&amp;d me chond se
ATTN I
ALL HOUSEW VES
POMEROY TRASH I now hove o
A. Yard Sa es Rummage
pe m t top ckup ash We con
Porch and Basemen Po ch
no
come o you If you wan
and Basement Sa les e c
us o pck up you I ash you
must be pad n advance
can call VI o 992 5715 o 992
Ge vou s n ea y by
3305 but emembe we can
s opp ng b y ou off ce a
The Oa ly Sen ne
11
no come o you You hove lo
Cour S or wr ng Box
co I us low ence Man ey
129 Pome ov Oh o -45769
SElOON Res Carom cs Tuppers
w h your em t ~tnce
Pia ns Oh o open ng Sept 13
Classes Monday 1 to l 0
Tuesday 9 o 12 I o.f 7 to
10 Thu sdoy I to .f- 7 to 0
PUBLIC NOTICE
d scount to Sen o Cl zens Call
TO EL THA STANS BURY
6/J7 2252 fo class rase va ons
MUSTARD If vng whose
address s unknown
TO ALDA J EASTERDAY
addr!5s unknown
TO EDGARD WHEELER
add ess unknown
LOST n M ddleporl b own male
TO
PEARL BEN NETT
4 mos 0 d Ge man Shephe d
add ess Unknown
s very s ck and unde dodo s
TO Lo 1t Seybond addre5$
core If found please ca 992
unknown
7269
TO Luel a Dav s address
unknown
TO Ru h wr nkelman ad
dreu unknown
TO Lott e Gask II address
unknown
TO Lule Wheeler address
vnknown
TO Ross w Gaskill address
unknown
TO Ra Ph Hoi er address
unknown
TO THE VN KNOWN HEIRS
DEVISEES
LEGATEES
ADM N STRATORS
AND
ASS GNS OF EL THA STAN S
BURY
MUSTARD
f
decea s ed
ROBERT w 1976 CHEVROLET • whee d ve
uck P hone 9~9 2132
STA NSBURY f deceased
LO TTIE
GASK ILL
If
deceased M NNIE HOLLER
f
deceased
FLOYD
EASTERDAY
f deceased
LULA
WHEELER
f
deceased
ZAD A HENRY
deceased
EVA J PARR
deceased
GEORGE H
STAN S SUR Y
deceased
JAMES W STA NSBURY
deceased
EMERSON E
STANDBURY
oeceased
VALINDA
EASTERDAY
deceased SARAH R STA NS
SU R Y deceosed AN DREW
S STANSBURY c:leceased
ANN A SMITH STANSBURY
dec eased NETTIE RO SS
deceased
EARL
RO SS OLD furn u e ce bous b ass
de ceased
CORA
B
beds woll elephones and
EASTERDAY deceas!Mi and
po ts o compl" households
E~VA
B WELL NGTON
Wr
e M D M I e R .c
deceased
Pome-roy
Oh o Co 1992 nw
You are he e by not f ed tha
you have been nam ed CASH pa d fo all makes and
defendants n a egal act on
models of mob le homes
ent tied Rober ta C 0 Br en vs
Phoneo eacode6H 423 9531
George Collins Treasu er of
Meg~ County
et al Th s TIMIU Pome oy Forest P o
action has been assigned Case
ducts Top p ce for stand ng
No
6 222 n the common
saw mb&amp; Call Kent Hanby
Pleas Court of Meigs County
I &lt;~6 8570
OhiO &lt;5769
The Ob jec t of he camp aint COINS 1929 and older cu rency
s to determ ne he rs and
go d and s lve sc ap W II buy
par t on real estate descr bed
o de Hove a good select on
as follows s tua ed n 01 ve
of coins to sell or trade A so
Townsh p Me gs coun y
Oh o
have suppl 11 and metal
Be ng n Sect on 35 Town 3
de ecors Rogl'r WaMsl•y On
Range 11 of the Oh o Com
lead ng C eek and Rutland
pany s Purchase and be ng
Rood Phone U2 2331 fo on of
he southeast quarter of the
fer
northwnt quarter of sal&lt;l
sect on and be ng descr bed $$CASH$$ fo 1unkod oulos
n Sarah R Stansbury sw I as
Phone 7,.2 2061 Frye 1 Tuck &amp;
the upper term on the north
Auto Po h Rutland
s de of Sllade R ver con
tan ng seventy 70) acres SUBMERS BlE wolo pump w th
more or less and being
p euu e onk and cant ols
describe-d in the- Me gs County
Cal 1 378 6223 o w lie G ant
Aud tors Oupl lca1es as south
Smith 8o;JC 93 Reedsv lie
east of northwest • con
Oho
lain ng so acres more or ess
You are requ ed to answer
the COmpla nt with n 28 days
after the last publ cat on of
h s no te wh ch w I be
PUbl shed once each wee k fo
s )( consecu t ve weeks The
as t publ cat on w be maGe
on 0~ 1 e 1976 ond the 21 IF YOU hove a 1erv ce to olfe
days for answer w II start on
wont to buy o sell someth ng
thet date
oe ooklng lor work
o
n case of you fa lure to
whateve
yov II gel esults
ans.wer or otnerw se re$pond
taste w th o Sent nel Want Ad
as required by the Oh o Ru es
of c v I Procedure udament
Co11992 2151&gt;
by defaul wilt be rendered
aga nst
you for rei ef SIX FAMil V yord solo Soot
8 9 10 11 3 and one half miles
demanjjed ln th s cam p a nt
LARRY E SPENCER
E of Tuppe s Pia ns on Rt 681
C erk Of Courts
V c o Bah residence Rain o
Com man P eas Cou t
sh ne Watch for s gns
Mt'igs county Oh o
YARD SAlE Wed Thundoy and
(9)) 10 17 2• (1011 8 61&lt;
Fr day 9 a m o .f p m laurel
Cl ff ol end of W llow Crook Rd
Signs posted
2 Bedroom mobile home n Roc ne
YARD SALE f rst ood on eft pas
area Phone 99'l 5858
WMPO Thu sdoy fr day 10
&lt; ROOMS and bo h ut lity oom
om ! Sp m
NOTICE ON FILING
also smo I 3 room house and
OF INVENTORY
YARD SAlE Thu sdoy Fr doy ond
bath Bo h completely furnl1h
AND APPRAISEMEI'IT
Satu day Ve y n ce cloth ng
od
Phone 992 5630
Tht Stott of Ohio Meigs
sam• Bee ne m acellaneous
County Court of Common
terns cha r small table rod o
Plell Probtte Division
Sw nee came 0 0 IQ 1969 Ford
To the E:JCecutor of the
Tor no P ced nry r.atonoble
ntefe to auch of the tol ow ng
Loco on I lncon Hll Rd
IS ere res den s of the Statt of
Ohio v z - the surv v ng
Pame oy Oh o For further n
~oust the next of k n the
fo mot on on tems phone
beneficiaries under the will
9'12 5524
•nd to the attorney or at
torneys represent ng any of YARD SAlE f ldoy Sept 10 10 BLACK MARE pony $30 00 or
the tfortmentloned persons
a m o 4 p m torner Rt 7 and
equal YO ue refrlg•ro or
Bernice Darst De ceased
Co Rd 26 F ve Points M Her
$25 00 Phono 9•9 2179
Pomoroy Oh io Sal isbu ry
man Wt~mens M u onorv
Townll'tlp No 21172
Assn
You •n hereby notlt ed that
t he Inventory and Ap
pralatmenl of the estate of the
aforementioned
deceaaed
11te of said County was In lhls
Courl Sold lnvontory
Appraisement
wll be ond
for
heorl . . bolero thlo Court on
th• 17th Clay of Stptembtr
1976 of 10 flO o clock A M
Any person dH ring to file
exceptrons thereto must file 1
1
lhom •lltlll flvo days prior lo
POMEROY 0
mo dele sof tor hear ng
PH 992 2176
Given Under my hand and
1111 of ttld cour1 thlt llst dty
of Augusl 1976
International
Manning D Wtl&gt;tfer
IHarvestw
Judgo
~

HOMESITES fo sale 1
up Mtddlepo I neo Ru land
Call 992 7,.81

10 IV/6

be up to you today to show
mo e n tat ve than your

pa tne n an mpo ten t matter
o jo nt conce n

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nav 22)
Because you be amb t ous to
day nan a ea whe e othe s ts
o ge off the d me the on s
sha e ol the spo s w II be
you s

SAG ITT ARtUS ('4ov 23 Doc:
21) n ac vtes whee I ends
a e nvo ved you have o pu
you se f out a I t1 e m o e than
usua f everyone s to have a
good t me

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jon
19) You have the facu ty oday
o nsp re one you love to lace
aM ove come a p ob em that s
had h m down Be a booste
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob 19)
s tl n-g on p ans Do
some h ng aboul them now
befo e t me uns out
PISCES (Fob 20 Morch 20)
Th s should be a mate a v
ewa d ng day fo yo u f you
play you ca ds ght Be w ng
to wo k fo what you hdpe to
ga n
Stop

~Your

~Birthday

OFFER REFUSED
ON NEW OR USED
CARS OR TRUCKS
•

The Closer You Look, The Better
We Look

1971 Ford Maverick 2 Dr.••••••••• '1695
Br ght red very n1ce

19n Volkswagen Beetle •••••••••••• '1795
low mileage

1973 Chevy Vega 2 Dr••••••••••••• 51495
Ole owner 11ery clean

1973 MercuJY Mootego •••••••••••• '2995
1974 Ford Grand Tonno 4 Dr••••••• 52795
C ean ns de and out

1974 Ford Mavenck 4 Dr••••••••••• 52795
A r auto

show room dean

ps

1972 Chevrolet Imp. 2 Dr•••••••••••'2195
One local owner

1972 Ford Grand Sport Tonno •••••• '1995
Auto trans a r P s
1974 Chevy 1h Ton P1ckup ••••••••• 53395
6 cyl

who no onge
vc n y

es des n you

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs Herbert Rousb
Mr and Mrs Clarence
Yeago of Letart W Va were
Sunday guests of Mr and
Mrs Andrew Cross
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Roush Sharon Roush attended an aU day meeting
and baptizing Sunday at
Maple Wood Lake
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Roush spent Sunday af
ternoon with Rev and Mrs
0 G McKinney at Maple
Wood Lake Rev McKinney
preached at the Nazarene
Church at Belpre Sunday
evemng where the Rev Bob
Stewart IS pastor
Donme and Gregory
0 Bnen of GallipoliS VISited
Mr and Mrs Larry 0 Brien
and children while the1r
father Mike 0 Br1en was a
heart patient at University
HOSpital Columbus
Rex 0 Bnen father of
Larry 0 Brien IS a patient at
Holzer Medical Center where
he suffered a h•art attack
Mrs 0 Brien ls staying WJill
Larry and fam1ly dunng h1s
hospitalization
Mr and Mrs Jack Ables
and son Paul spent Lhe
weekend with MISS VIcki
Ables at Canal Winchester
Mr and Mrs Ables attended
the Ohio Slate Fa1r
Columbus Sunday
Paul Ables was an appendecltis patient at Holzer
Medical Center He hed
surgery Tuesday and was
discharged Thursday
Mrs Icte Tucker (a former
resident) had the IDlsfortune
of falling at her home In Leon
W Va
breaking her
shoulder
Mrs J1m Fife and children
of Cheshire were Sunday
evening guests of Mrs Till
Webb
Mr and Mrs C E Blakes
lee of Pomeroy spent Sunday

CAR$
1975 Chevrolet Vega Wagon, 4 cyl ,
auto trans , factory a1r
52295
1974 Ford Grand Tormo, 4 dr sedan,
factory a1r P S , P B , vmyl
roof
52595
1974 Chevy Monte Carlo, 350 V 8,
automatic, factory air r p I p B ,
vmyl roof, with sun roof, swing out
bucket seats, AM FM stereo radial
t1res Local owner and sharp $4200
1973 Ford L TO 4 dr , factory atr,
P S , P B , vmyl roof tilt
wheel
52495
1973 Chevy Impala 4 dr, factory air,
P S P B vinly roof
$2495
1973 Dodge Polara CusTom, 4 dr
sedan factory a1r P ~ , P B , v1nyl
roof radtal tires A mce fam1ly
car
$1995
1973 Bu1ck LeSabre Custom, 4 dr
H T , factory a1r, P S , P B , vmyl
roof
$2795
1973 Olds Delta 88, 4 dr , H T ,
factory a1r, P S , P B , vmyl roof
Clean
$1995
1973 Ply Sat Custom, 4 dr , sedan,
factory a1r automatiC, P S , P B
vmyl roof clean
$1995
1972 Vega, 4 cyl
factory a1r,
hatchback
$1195
1972 Plymouth, 2 dr
H r,
auto trans factory a1r
$1495
1972 Pontiac Lemans 2 dr coupe 6
cyl automatic P S
$1695
1972 Olds Toronado Custom, one
owner &amp; loaded
$1995
1972 Pmto Statton Wagon, 4 cyl ,
automatiC
$1395

s

I

"Good Selection of
Cheaper Cars In Stock."

std lrans

Sopt 11 1976
Some h ng advantageous to
you may be ofle ed you h s
yea from.. a d s ant source II
cou d come th oug h a person

1975 Ford Super Cab, long wti:le bed,
12 000 mtles L1ke new
$3495
1974 Ford F 100, 6 cyl standard
trans , long wtde bed
$2495
1973 Ford F 100 Custom, 6 cyl
standard trans , long wtde bed $2495
1973 Chevrolet 112 Ton Truck, 350 V 8
engme stand trans , long wide bed,
radial ttres Sharp
$2495
1972 Ford Econohne Van, 302 V 8,
long wheel base, partly finished
lnstde
$2000

1969 Ford Bronco
1971 Ford Tonno
1965 BuiCk 4 Dr

1970 Dodge Dart 2 Dr
1971 Chevy 4 Dr

RIGGS USED CARS
RO!I er R1 ebe I

AND MANY MORE
See Pat Htll Rocky Hupp
or Melvtn L1Hie
Open Evenmgs Tll7 00
Except Th urs and Sat

Closed sunday

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

Middleport

Mrs Butcher who recently
moved to the farm they
purchased from Mrs Pearl
Norns Mrs Morns has
moved to her mobile home on
the DarreU Noms farm
Mr and Mrs Hersehel
Norris spent Sunday evening
with Mrs Pearl NorriS
Mrs
Chester Durst
grandsons Ronme Cox Ntles
0 Craig Reeder Mineral
Ridge Mrs Dorsa Parsons
called on Mr and Mrs
Herbert Roush Saturday
Mr and Mrs Everette
Parsons and daughters
Karen Ruth Cathy Kay of
Negley 0 spent Tuesday
evemng wl th Mr and Mrs
Herbert Roush They spent a
week s vacation at their farm
on TalUiers Run and also
VISlted his molher Mrs Rutll
Parsons Mrs Edna Parsons
and Mark Preston Parsons
AStanley party will be held
at the church annex Sept 14
Evelyn Holter Is the hostess
Time730pm
Mrs rlorence Smith was
lay speaker at the Morning
Star Church Sunday morning
Mr and Mrs Robert Smith
Sr visited Mr and Mrs Jim
Freeman Erwm Pa Mr
and Mrs Joe Oerouln Mr
and Mrs Bob Srt Ill Jr Mr
and Mrs Billy S mth aU of
M1llv1lle Pa Mr and Mrs
Martin
Deroum
at
Clanngton P~
Mr and Mrs J m Heaton of

Case Farm Tractor, 4 sp trarts ,
3 pomthttch
$675

~fdidle!~ort have moved to the
Jay
residence purchased
from Mr and Mrs RusseU
Quillen
Mr and Mrs Lawrence
Balser and fam1ly of Tuppers
Pla1ns were Sunday guests of
Mrs Alice Balser Mr and
Mrs Carroll Balser spent
Saturday tiU Tuesday Wlth
Mrs Balser
Attending the State Fall' at
Columbus were Mr and Mrs
DaDas Hill and Dean Mr and
Mrs MarshaU Roush and
Joey Mrs Dolly Wolfe Mr
and Mrs Carl Wolfe Jr and
children Mr and Mrs
Darrell Norris and Tracy
The WSCS of the local
church purchased carpet and
chall's for tlle alUieX
Dale WaUace HJU of Moore
Haven Fla amved for an
mdeflmte visit with his
brother Mr and Mrs MIII'Vln
Hill and family on Bashan

Rd

Mr and Mrs Don BeU
spent a few days with Lorna
Bell at Columbus Don attended the Ohio State Fair
Mr and Mrs Don Bell left
Saturday for a vacation at
Vlrgima Beach
George Hupp of Portland (a
former resident) Is confined
to Veterans Memonal
Hospital after havmg
surgery Mr and Mrs Arnold
Hupp are asslatlng m h1s
care
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Roush Mrs lvn Orr were
I

Located 3n St Rl

985

41 00

7

Ray Rtggs
Olester 0

Carpenter Personals
~

Murl Galaway attended the
wedding of her great
grandson James Petty to
Tammy Riley Botll live at
McArthur and the wedding
was at the Nazarene Church
there
Guests of Mrs Chancey
Staneart were her daughters
and famUles mcludlng Mr
and Mrs Scott Leeds
(Maxine) Charles Scott
Rita and Diane Rockledge
Florida and Mr and Mrs M
L Patterson (Mary) Betty
Ann Debbie and Michael
Oxen Hill Maryland This
reunion was plalUied as the
family had not heen together
for se~eral years The Pat
tersons were enroute to
Mtssourl where
their
daughter Betty enroUed m a
Baptist CoUege there
Mr and Mrs Dennis
Facemeyer and children and
Mrs Dwaine Jordan and
Keith attended the Cln
crnnati Reds hall game at
Rl\erfront Stadmm on
Sunday This trip was
sponsored for the Lit tle
League baD team that the
boys belong to for players
and thell' fanulies
Mr and Mrs Robert
Mattox spent Sunday 10
Fairborn Ohio where they
vlslted her brother-In law ana
stsler Mr and Mrs John
Fout
The Woodrum family who
formerly lived in the com
munlty had their annual
reuruon at Lake Hope State
Park on Sunday Murl
Galaway attended with her
shopping at the Silver Bridge
Plaza Friday evening They
aU visited Mr and Mrs Dana
Lewis Cllrton Salurday
evemng

son-In law and daughter Mr
and Mrs Leon Woodrum of
McArthur and reported a
good attendance
Laura Krebs and mother
Mrs Maude Holcomb along
With her aunt Ruth Swisher
Radcliff took a trip thrOlJI!h
southern United States
traveling to Ft Worth
DaUas Texas area where
they visited a slster-m.Jaw
Gwendolyn
Roach at
Arlington Tex and a sister s
m law mother Mrs Gladys
McWhorter Lockh8rt Texas
and then traveled down along
the Texas coast before
returning home
Mr and Mrs John Culwell
Columbus spent Sunday with
his brother and sister·ID law
Mr and Mrs William
CuiweD
Reverend and Mrs Davld
W1seman Jana Rene Evan
David and Owen Earl
Woodsfield Ohio have been
vacationing With relatives in
tllls area and spent some time
with his grandparents Mr
and Mrs Earl Starkey

NEW YORK (UPI) Hard-hitting Ernie Shavers
wtll meet veteran boxer
Henry Clark in a 10-round
battle of heavyweights in a
scheduled prel!mlnary to the
Muhammad Ali Ken Norton
fight world heavyweight
championship fight Tuesday
September 28 at Yankee
Stad1wn
Shavers who has won 49 of
his 51 career victories by
knockouts will fight Clark a
12-year veLeran of tlle ring
w1tl1 a wm over knockout
spectahst Jeff Merntt

l

�H - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Sept. l0,1976

VFW district to
ALBANY - Political involvement In the November
elections will be a key item of
discussion by members of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars
when they meet Sunday at a
District Twelve conference '
here at the home of Post 9893.
The Albany post ~host
representatives from
ns,
Ross, VInton, Pike, ckson,
Meigs, Scioto, Ga ia and

MEIGS lltEATRE
TONIGHT

Sat. &amp; Sun .
Sept. 10-11 -12
THE BREAKING .POINT

Bo Suenson, Robert Culp

Bel inda J

Montgomer/
"R"

Show sf arts at 7 p.m.

m~ in

News •• in Briefs

Albany Sunday

Lawrence Counties,
representing inure than 3,300
overseas veterans. George
Woodyard, .., Second Ave.,
GaWpolls, Is district commander.
Woodyard said, "The VFW
must become more Involved
politically; I don't mean lhe
endorsemen I of one party or
another. I mean we m111t '
send a man or woman to
Congress who stands up for
veterans .and a. strong
·national defense."
He said the VFW wiU
support for public office those .
" who make promises to
veterans and th~ keep those
promises." But he aays the
· VFW will vote out of office
those congressmen and
senators who do not.
At their Albany meeting,
delegales are expected to
renew their· appeal for a
strong national defense In the

(()intlm'ftl !ram 11111e I)

face of lncreulng Soviet
mUitary cajlacity, opreu
their opp&lt;lllllon to amneaty
for draft dodgers and
military des«ters and c:all
for the reltnti011 of American
soveretanty over the Panama
Canal.
They're allo e:tpeeted to
aat for liberalized penaiOIIII
for veterans and their
widows, ellenalon and
protection of veterans
preference In public employment, lmjii'OVeiMIIta In
employment ~ervlce to
veterans, and Increased
efforts to flrid jobs for
veterans.
PTO TO MEET
LETART FAin~ - The
Letart Falla PTO will bold Ita
first meeting Monday, Sept.
13, 7:30 p.m. at the
elementary school. Guest
speaker Mike Gerlach will
talk 011 the hlatory of Melia
Coulnty, primarilY the Letart
Falls and Apple Grove area.
Everyone welcome to attend,

Allhton Qled the orders COftrii1c the McDonald Mills Plant at
Mcl)!n•Jd and the Ollio Worb at Youngstown, It was
8MOUIICed Tlmnday.
"'l'be liplng ol the orders Ia 8.l!Other step towarda
imp'oved air quallly In the eulem section of the state," said
Wllllama. '!be orders provide for tile convenlon ol two bollen
at McDonald M!Uafrom coal-drlng to oll.ftrlng and two bollen
at the Ohio wen. from blut furnllee gu u a primary fuel to
oil as primary fuel In cllllbinatlon with natural gas and excess
blalll furnace gsa. Two other boilers at the Ohio Works will use
low ash coal, WUilama said.
CINCINNATI - RETAIL MILK PRICES In the greiter
Cincinnati area will be going up eight to 10 cents a gaUon
beginning M011d&amp;y, accordlrlg to Ted Osborne, aecretarytreuurer of tile Onclnnali Cooperative Mlllt Sales
Association, Inc.
Osborne said Thuraday a hike of sl:t cents per gallon paid
to farmers and other collls factors including adjustments lor
labor and pack.sglng were reasons for the price Increase. He
said tile average coat of mlllt per gallon In most stores now will
be about

Fairview
News Notes
.

•uo.

TH
ISA

(Bet you thought it was a

maa ~~~:)..

With a free Bank-by-Mail form, you
can bank here 24 hours a day.
It's a bank . .. but call it a maillx&gt;x.

Best IndiCated he would set
a new hearing 011 the petlli011
lor Sept. 17.
'!be Judge ordered tile four
to jaU on opeMnd sentences
m Sept. 3 after they refllaed
to tell a court Inquiry how the
newspaper obtained
testimony from a sealed
grand JW'Y transcript. Scme
ci the testimony appeared in
a series of stories In the
newpaper Ill January 1975.
In . addition to tbe
supportive
rally by the
FolD"."
People's
Temple
Olrlstlan
Bee attorney Philip C.
,Fullert011, meanwhile, went Olurcb, the California Labor
1to court again aUiDg lor an Federatllll, AFL-C!O, Issued
'evidentiary hearing to free I statement 'lb~y night
saying aU trade unionists
the neWIIIl ...;- _
sbould
be "deeply disturbed"
Fulllrton aald tne pelili011
was fllecl In the oo1R'I ol
Superior Court Judge RoWs
SORORITY TO MEET
Best. It alked for a bearing 1o
Oblo
Eta Pili Olapter of
determine If there was any
Beta
Sigma
Pili IOI'Oiity will
likelihood that further jaU
meet
Tuesday,
Sept. H, 7:30
time for Bee Managing
Editor· George Gruner, p.111. at tile Columbus and
cmbodaman Jllines Bert, Jr. Southern Ohio Electric Co.
and reporters William
. I

pomeroy

. . rutl~nd
tuppers plams

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872
I

~~&amp;v.....

their""~·

FLAMING SlJRPRIIIE
OXfORD, Ollio (UP!)- A
flaming de.erl tDOk I bile
out ol Ita would-be aater
Thursday In the restaurant at
the Htllltcn Woods Slate
Park Lodge.
Pollee aald the dessert,
•whipped IIIIo 111 IDimto by
the air condlt!Gner, bumecl
tbe reataurant table and
licked lit the startled diner.
Pollee would not releale
the (IOII'IIIet'a name, but aald
he bad been releaaed alter
treatment at a local bolpltal
for second degree burn~
about the heed and ean.

CARWASHSET
There will be a car wash at
. Eberl Gulf Stati011 in Racine
Sa~y. Sept. 11 from 9
am. to 5 p.m., .aponsored by
the Soutbern Varsity and
Reserve Cheerleaders.

now you lmow
Imperial China 'a royal
lilloce doo waa aomeUmea
determined
by court
aslrOIIomers, who decided
which of a newly dead em,
peror's aona waa born Wider
the right combination of
alan.

Returning For Their Second Big Week

At The Inn Place_

NEHI

Ills Mtb birthday. Mr. Bush

w• money.
pre•nled lovely glfta
He wu aurprlaed
~md

at hll home on PorUand Rt.
Attending were Rev. and

Mrs. Ernest Bulb~ Ml:. and
Mrs. Charles Bush, children

ANTIQUES SHOWN - Elate Rolllh dllpiaya a few of the antiques whiCh will
· be amCI!lg those on display at the bicentennial observance at the Meigs ~nlor
r.itl7.1!11.1 Center and IZI'OWidl Saturday. Moat of the Items belong to Freda Llevlng
Jllll ~liP.!!! !l~~rbach, Pomeroy. The knitting machine near Mrs. Roush belongs
to her brother, Francts Morris, of Racine.
·

'

SA'ftJRIMY.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'10

VOL 11 NO. 33

. GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT .

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1976

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

~~--~--~----~~------------~~~~~~~----~~~~~----~~~~

'

REDUCED!

BATHING SUIT? - Robin Southeru,
daughter of Mr. and Mn. Robert
Southern, Middleport, models an old'
fashioned bathlng suit, one of several she
and other members ol the freshmao
cheering squad ol the Meigs High School
will wear at the blceoteonlal celebration
Sepl 18 wbeo they take a chaoce on being
dipped toto the water at the dtuy'tfunter.

.

School board offers teachers
pay boosts of $350 to· $1208

REDUCED!

VAW.E
RATED

PRICED TO

PRICED TO

SALE!

USED CAR SALE!

SALE!

75 Ood&amp;e o.t
· Swinaer Cpe.

11 Cadillac Eldorado Cpe.l power, ait . '3295

·74 AMC Hornet
2 Door

Automatic,
WasS3495

75 Olds Cutlass Sup. Sedan, pow~ air ..'4895
69 Buick LeSabre 4 Dr., air .............. ~495

67 Cadillac HT Sed~ power, air.......... '995 ·

72 Cluysler Newport
Was $1795

now on~ 51495

74 Olds Cul Sup. Cpe., power air ....... '4195
74 Olds Cutlass, 4 dr pow. air · ... ;.~ .... '3895
70 Nora 2 Dr,_4 speed .... ... .-........... '895
74 Chev. Imp.' 4 dr. H.T., power, air. : . '3295
74 Pontiac Lemans Spl Cpe, pow., air '3495
16 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................. '9895
While finish wlfh fan cabrolef roof. full power and air,
low mllea~ .

71 Chevy Impala

HT5edin

73 Ford Gal. 500 HT Cpe. pow, air.••••'23951

2-73 Ford LTD, 4 dr, Air.............. '2695
73 Buick Elec. lml Cpe., pow, air .••.. '.129573 Buick Repl HT Coupe, Full power
and air ....................•............. ,.s3495
68 CadiHac Cpe. DeVHie .................. '795

Power, air.
Was$14'5

now only '1295
71BuiCkSkylark
HT Cpe.

Full pqwer. white wlfh blue frlm .

·

72 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr., air •••.•. '1995

Air
Was$1695

.

'

72 Buick Elec. 225 HT Cpe., power air. 12495

Coupe

72 Chev. Imp. 4 Door, V-8, auto., air •. '1595
71 Olds 98 Lux. sed., pow, air......... !1995.
70 ford _HT Coupe..... .................... '695

Auto. trans.
Was $2195

69 Olds 88 HT .Coupe .................... '395

now on~ s1995

68 VW Transporter Bus, heater •••• 11095

74 Vep.Hatchback

1

Full power. air
Was $1995

now on~ s1595

Automatic trans.
Was $2295

now only '1995
71 Poritiac Cat.
Coupe
Power, air.
Was $1095

now on~ '895
71 AMC
. Hornet
Sportabout Wagon
., _ ....,..._ _

WasSI095

now on~ '895
72 Olds 98
4 Dr., Power and Air .

Was '2495
now ~~ '2295

70 Ford LID Wagon
PS, PB, AI~
·was '895

now on~ '695

72 Chew Imp.

74 Vega GT Cpe. 73 Olds 88 4 Dr. 72 Chevy
Air
· Was 51595

$1395

'41hw

V-8, auTO:alr

Was

KARR &amp;VAN-ZANDT

'"ZERPHA BLUE"
Feaiuring Darrell Sh~ppard
.,

The MEIGS INN

contest.
The contest w1U be in three classes
which will Include bkycles, riders through
16; tricycles, riders through six, and two
or three wheelers, riders over 16.
At 10:4S there will be a cracker eating
and whistle contest. At II : IS, a three
lagged race ; al11 :30 a.m., sack races: at
11:4S a.m ., watermelon eating contest.
At 12 noon, tu~-of-war for adults only;
at 12:4S p.m. a p1e eating.contest.
At 1:15 p.m., a roltlng pin throw ; at
2:30 p.m. a husband . calling contest
followed by a wife caltlng contest ; at 3:30
p.m. a tobacco spltUng contest : atJ:iS, a
horseshoe throwing contest; at 4:3D, a hog
calllng contest, and at 5:30 p.m . a
mustache · contest with prizes for the
longest, the thickest and the scraggliest.
At 6 a bicentennial costume contest
wlll be held with prizes for the best couple,
the most authentic, and the prettiest with
two age groups taking part in the three
categories. One age group will be con. kstanl.&lt;! under 16 ; the other 16 and older.
Another part of the observance will be
on displays which will include a plant
show, bee hus!&gt;andry , a memory corner, a
display of minis ture steam engines, a still,
woodworking tools, shoe making tools,
antique cars, an art show, an exhibit by the
(Continued on page 2)

tmts

OPEN SATURDAY, 9:30 to 5 PM

Open Eveningsl'i16- TIISp.m. Sat.

"You'll like Our Quality Way of .Doing Business';

'--...:----~--------

•

. ROYAL CROWN
BOTn.ING OOMPAfiY

A schedule of events for the
celebration has been completed.
Entertainment will start at 10 a.m.
and will continue throughout the day.
There will be several emcees, among
whom are Dan Smith and Joan Stewart,
contesl.&lt;! and games: Joe Struble and Bill
Young, entertainment, and Betty Fultz for
the. bicentennial contest.
A sing-a-long wlll open the day with
Francis Andrew's band appearing at 11
a.m., at 11 :30a.m. BUI Hoselton, and his
one-ma n band act.
The Senior Citizens Square Dancers
wiU be featured at 12:1S, and at 1 p.m.
Amos Leonard, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Ward and daughters, Kenda will present
dulcimer numbers.
·
The Old-time Fiddlers will be featured
at 1:30 p.m.; a skit by the Big Bend CB
Clubwlll be at3, and at 4p.m. the " kitchen
band" of the Belpre senior citizens will
play.
At S there will be music by the Meigs
Senior Citizens Chorils and a ?:3D
presentation, "I Love America" by . the
Church of Christ. Singers will be follOwed
by a square dance.
•
Besides the above entertainment there
will be contests and events taking place
during the day which will starl at 10: IS
a.m. with a bicen~nnlal decorated bicycle

•••

MAIN SlORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE

IT'S KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT'S

IIOw on~ '1995

--

I'

BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - The staff of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center is keeping
fingers crossed this week and hoping for
111nny weather Saturday.
And small wonder the staff members
are resorting to luck, or whatever, in
hoping for a sunny day Saturday. They've
worked for weeks in lining up what appears to be a great bicentennial
celebration lor Meigs county,
The observance which will carry out a
"yesteryear" theme, has a program offering "sometblng for everybody." Most of
the actlvllies wlll, of course, be outdoors
on grounds behind the old Pomeroy Junior
High School where the senior cl tizen:;
center is located. Cooperation from
businesses, organizations and individuals
toward helping with the celebration has
been "tremendous," stall members
report.
Soine IS trophies have been secured to
be presented to winners of various events
with the Village Pharmacy being the latest
firm to purchase a trophy for the observance. The Fannera Bank and Savings
Co. and the Pomeroy National Bank have
contributed silver dollars to be given as
prizes and some of the outstanding crafts
made by senior cl Uzens at the center will
be given also as awards.

'

Wasmu

Tt'MIGHT

I•

Pre-Season Coat Sale

about the jalllng.
The organlutlon, which
represen~ t7 m!Won union
members In California, saki
the action "strikes at the
heart
of the
Fl rst
Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution" which assures
freedom of Uie press.
Last weekend, memben of
the American Newspaper
Guild were joined by other
journalists from throughout
the ate in a rally to support
the jaUed four.

4Speed

They Play It All

varied 'Yesteryear' program

Save This Weekend During Our
Women's-Girls'-Men's-Boys'

-loyal 2 Dr. HT
LAUREL CLIFF
Attendance at the services
Aug. 5at lhe Free Methodist
Olurch waa 127.
Miss
Ma~cla
Karr,
Syracuae, recenUy called on
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr.
Mr. and Ml:a. William
Perry,
Athena, spent
Saturday with Mrs. Perry's
parents, Mr ~ and ·Mrs .
Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Jacoba and standaon, Bobby
Archer. Mr. aad Mrs. Bruce
Jacoba, Columbus, 11J1ent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Purl Jacoba.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ho1rell,
spent !be weekend at their
home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Phlll Wile,
· ~erly, attended morning
services Sunday at tbe local
church.
Mrs. Pauline Halley,
Crookavllle recentiy caDed on
her aunt, Mrs. Georgll Diehl.
Mr. Harmon Fox Ia not ao
well at this writing.

A IIUI'J)rile blrlllday dinner

waa held In bonor ol Roy BUill
Sunday who wu celebrating

Bicentennial celebration has

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM

NORTH RIDGEVIUE, OHIO- A SCHOOL LEVY of· 4.9
mDls that would have ·raised about t300,000 a year . was
defeated soundly Thursday by voters, passing In only three ol
21 preclncta. ·
Tile outcome may not, however, force closing of schools In
November and December of 1977 as originally forecast, ssld
Superintendent Roger T. Beitler. 'lbe system will get about
$152,000 In e:ttra local tuee !run property reappraisal, he
Slid, oot still will neec1 about $15o,ooo.
.

Patterlllll and Joe Rosato
would trumce !bern to reveal

DOll.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

800 rally to support journalists
By WW.lAM COLEMAN
FRESNO, Calif. (UPI) &lt;l!urch, Llabor and media
· group~~ are rallying around
tbe four Fresno Bee
journalists who are servina
Indefinite )1111 terma for
refusiilg to. reveal a news
source.
A religious group of 1100
. pe~8011f! fr~ San Francisco,
carrying plaCards resdlng
"free preas.tree Americ:a"
caravaned to
Fresno
Tlltindly for an around-theclock demonstration tn
suppofl of the "Fresrio

villted the Don Manuel
family Tlluraday evening and
enjoyed pll,ylng millie with

By Mn. Herbert 11oMb
George Sayre of ~ver,
Colorado 11P4!DI from Tuesday
till Friday with Mr. and Mra.
Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mra . Herbert
Sayre, George Sayre, Mr. and
Mra. Carroll Sayre were all.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. David'
S,.yre Wedneaday.
Mrs. Joyce Manuel vlllled
her father, Earl Hart at
Racine Tuesday.
Frank Hudson of Racine

Peggy and Billy. Ml: • •and
Ml:a. Wllllrd PIIOil and
Rllchel, Mr. and Mn. £1111111
Altboule and lour ebildrlll,
lJIIC Botlml: Rev. aJid Mra.
Lawrence Bulb, Mr. and
Mrs. Jue BUill and chlldnl1,
Martln, Carol Jean and
Ja~~~e~ , Robert Bulb and clrl
lrlend P.ullne of WlCIIter.
Mr. Roy Blllh. dllllhter
Robin of Eut Uverpool, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Bulh and
two sons of North Carolina
attended the Ours reunl011 at
Rock Springs Fair grounds
Sunday.

,.;ee one of these courteous salesmen: Pete · Burris, · Lloyd
Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh.

or

992·5342

·GMAC FiiiiiiCin&amp;

PameraJ

USED CARS.

COACH WILLARD (Buddy)
Moore'• Galllpolla Blue Devlla got off to
a good start at Rock Hill Friday night
with a2%·8 victory over tbe Redmen. See
detail&amp; of tills and other area high sehoul
games in today'• sports section. (Keith
Wilson photo).

.

Nephew's victory
just made their day
LETART, W. Va. - Sunday was a
thrilling day for Mrs. Grace Brown and
Mrs. Ollie Browning, both of Letart. They
were passengers on the "Winifred" one of
the big stern wheelers that participated
recently in the slxtll aiUiual Stern
Wheelers Regatta at Charleston, W. Va.
One thing that made it so special was
their boat won and its pilot was William
Price, Jr., of Megley, Ohio, a nephew of
Mrs. Brown's.
.
Two other boats the same size as the
Winifred participated. The Winifred Is
owned by Capt. Clyde Bryant of Zanesville. ·
Persons Uned boUt sides of the
Kanawha for the race which was 2.6 miles,
from the Kanawha City Bridge to South
Side bridge.
·

MIDDLEPORT - Salary increases
offered striking Meigs Local ·school
District teachers in the latest negotiations
range from $350 at the base to $1,206 at the
top of .lhe schedule.
.
This is disclosed in a ietter mailed to
aU teachers of the district Friday. The
letter, slgned by superintendent of the
district, ctlarles Dowler, and Wendell
Hoover, bpard presiden t, urges the
teachers to aecept the 9ffer and return to
work.
Teachers have been on strike since
Ialit Tuesday. On Friday, negotiations
continued between the board of education
and representatives of the Ohio Education
Assn .• and the Meigs Local Teachers Assn;
There were to be no more meetings on
Saturday but a meeting of the board of
education has been called for 4 p.m. on
·Sunday.
The let~r said :
"As you know, the Board of Education
and the Meigs Local Teachers' Association
are currently negotiating. On behalf of the
Board and the administration, we want
you to know that we intend to keep
negotiating until this matter Is resolved . In
thls respect, we Intend to fully liVe up to
our contract with tile MLTA as well as our
Individual contracts with each teacher.
"Of the items being negotiated, the
hangup seems to be tile money item. The
Board made a new offer to the teachers on
Wednesday evening September 8, 1976.
This current and most recent offer of the
Board is based on an annual projection of
Increasing the teachers' salary schedule
$350 at the hase and $1,206 at the top of the
schedule. This would mean lhat ·effective
immediately the startlng salary would be
$a,300 and the salary at the top of the
schedule would be $14,110. In addition to
these salaries, supplemental contracts
:::::::~:::::::::~~::~~:~:::::;:~:~:::~~:::::~:::::::!:~::,:::::::::::-::::;.;.;.;:;::·:·:·:·:·::;.

Water district will

show off new office
EAST MEIGS - The Tuppen
Plalu-Chester Water District will hold
an epen · bouse showing Its new office
on Sunday, Sept. 19 from I to I p.m.
located on St. Rt. 7, one mile north of
Eastern High Sc~ool.
The treatment plant at Long Bottom
wilt be open for Inspection at the same
time. Penonnet of the district wilt be
preseot to explain how the water Is
pumped, treated and distributed Into the
system.
A special IDvltatlon Is extended to
everyone whether or not they are
customen. Refreshments will be se}'Ved
at both locations.

Golf tournament set
GALLIPOLIS - Ute Southeastern
Golfers can tee off as early as 8 a.m.
Ohio Regional Council will hold its annual and continue through the day. The tourgolf tournament atthe Fairgreens Co\Ultry nament will be a handicap affair and
Club jn Jackson County Thursday, Sept. prizes will be awarded for low gross .a'ld
' 30, it was announced by Bob Evans.of this low net, Evans said.
ci ty, president of the SEORC.
Elmer Elckelberg and Roger Beatty,
The tournament will be followed by a _the execuUve heads of the Jackson afid
hospitaUly tour and a dinner meeting with Wellston Chambers wlll act as the official
"the Jackson and Wellston · Chambers of · hosts.
.
Commerce hosting the day.
Tickets may be purchased for the golf
Evans said Ralph Negri, formerly tournament and diiUier meeting or for the
. with National Cash Register, ~11 be the dinner meeting only, Evans' said, and
dinner speaker when be Wlll discuss tile added Uta t guests were welcome and that
American Free Enlerpnse System. Evans tickets could be purchased from Bernard
disclosed the Council Will recogmze Fultz in Pomeroy-Middleport. and Roger
several industrial and business leader~ in Barron 1n Gallipolis,
'
southeastern Ohio.

I

•\

would provide additional income, We feel
this offer, which reflects both an iilcrease
at the base and an improved index. is lair
and should be accepted.
.
"Some other parts of the Board's offer

include the Board's paying 100 percent of
the family hoSpitalizaUon costs, an increase of supplemental contracts (these
increases range anywhere from $20 to
approximately $550). an increase in

severance pay from 20 days to ·30 ~ys, an .
"In view of the fact that the Meigs
increase in personal b~~Siness days from Local teachers' salary schedule base was
two days to three days, and an increase in $7,350 in September, 197S and was inmaximum sick leave accumulation from creased $600 to a base of $7,950 in January
135 to 140.
of 1976; we feel the offer of an additional
$350 at the base and $1,208 at the top is fair,
and more importanUy, within the financial
limits Of the school district. This matter
should be resolved now , particularly since .
the negotiations for the 1977-78 school year
wilt be starling within the next four
must seek alternate routes. It Is also a months.
major problem lor school bus drl.vers In
"The Board and administration fee l
the Kyger Creek.area. They too are forced we have taken a fair posi lion and ask you
to find alternate ro.utes or drive through to accept it. We al•o ask that you honor
water.
your contract and come back to work. By
At present, SR 554 is scheduled for continuing to be on strike, which you are,
Improvements, but although en·
you breach your contract with the Board.
vironmental studies are in progress, it
If you don 't agree with the con tract then it ·
may be five or more years before any is your right to work for its change or
construction contract can be awarded.
amendment, but why not do so under the
Two years ago , plans called for a new terms and condilions of the Olllectlve
road to run for one and one-half mites at an Bargaining Agreement. Please honor your
overall cost of about $920,000. Now, the contract and come back to work.
engineering studies alone are to cost
"We urge you to · consider the in$100,000.
formation
con tained in this letter and
Darnell, who took a week of his
comeback to work , Let's build this system
vacation Ialit month to go to Columbus to - not tear it down."
the Ohio Department of Transportation's
The release of the above let~r is the
main offices to plead lor SR 554's case said
first
move on either side of the dispute to.
the project has been reduced to three~dv i se the public of any part of the
fourths of a mile plus raising the highway negotia lions.
five feel.
It is reported that there is an
According to John B. Ellis, Assistant
agreement
between the teachers
Deputy Director, ODOT, construction
association and the board of education that
flUids are eannarked in three segm~nts, negotiation details are not to be disclosed
emergency, maintenance, and federal .
to the public.•However, it is understood
Within three weeks, all studies on Rt.
554 should be completed, however, no that the letter was released because the
has broken the agreement that
lunda _are available for project planning. . strike
negotiations be secret .
Ellls, however, has conf1m1ed that
there Is an emergency fund which could be
used to repair the highway. That filnd is
controlled by Governor James A. -Rhodes
and can only be used if the governor
declares an emergency.
Division 10 Highway Director Glenn
Smith, former Gallia OJunty Engineer,
said his hands are tied : "We are completing our environmental surveys, but the
project has not been placed on the drawing

SR 554 awaits improvements
· By Dale Redlgeb
OLD KYGER - Residents living
. along State Route 554 west of Oleshire
continue to face the same problem yearalter-year, month-after-month, ~Veek­
after·week. It is water on SR 554 and no .
help Is readily available.
The conditions have persisted several
years and continue to worsen. However,
highway officials admitted last week help
is ·available through Governor James
Rhodes and an emergency fund.
Marion Darnell, Rt. I, Oleshire, one of
many concerned residents, has writltn to
representatives of the state and federal
governments and to engineers of the Ohio
Department of Transportation, but his and
others' efforts have been In vain.
It seems that Rl. 554 has become a
welt-known hi~hway because of its

habitual flooding problem, but, again,
nothing has been done to change that
si tua lion.
Two years ago, a public hearing ws
held at Kyger Creek High School regarding construction of a new _highway or .
raising of the emting route, but residents
have seen titUe improvement. Darnell said
that during the public hearing, Burien C.
Henline, District 10 Transportation
Planner, reported a new road would be
constructed within two years. 'lbus far , the
only improvement has been two Inches of
asphalt on the old one,
Not only does flooding cause many
problems, even though just a little rain hits
the area. 'lbe areas near the highway
become swampy which are breeding
grounds for mosquitoes and other insects.
When the area is flooded, local traffic

113th Emancipation
celebration is set
GALLIPOLIS - Since 1863, the churches participating. Rev. Henry
Emancipation Proclamation has been Fletcher will be the morning speaker.
In the afternoon, Rev. Charles H.
celebrated and observed In Galtla County.
Thls is the only political entity known as Smith from Huntington, W.Va. will be the
large aa a county to have consecutively speaker. He is the minister and comp-paid tribUte to this historic document since troUer of the First Baptist Olurch and he Is
Its emtence.
.
also the Executive Director of the Tri·
The celebration began on the 22nd of State Opportunities Industrialization
September, no matter which day of the Cen~r. He Is a member of the Executive
week It happened to be. It was conducted Board of the Huntington Branch NAACP
in'a religious atmosphere. However, such and the National Executive Board.
fun activities as baseball, sack racing, hog
The Ohio-West Virginia Interstate
caWng and greasy wte climbing were Pollution Commission, the Stella Fuller
included to stimulate interest and main- Settiemenl Inc., and the Barnett Chiid
taln the enthusiasm.
Care Center also utilize Smith's talents
Such places as Kerr Station, VInton and abilities. Music and art play a very
"Bean Dinner" Park, Bush Park at Bid- important role In this young man's life as
well-Porter, and the Galli a County he demonstrates his creativity In music·
Fairgrounds In Gallipolis, have had the drama productions and In artistic design
privilege of holding the celebration .
and paintings. Rev. Smith lives at home
Mrs. Dorothy Thomas of Bidwell has with his wife, Lil!le, and their three
been the president since 1939. She also has daughters , Jacqueline, Debbie and
the distinction of being the only woman Stephanie.
presldent of the Emancipation. Her lather,
Thls year at least 3,000 people are
the Rev. C. M. Payne, held that same . expected to attend the Emancipation.
pos!Uon as president IS years. So between 'lbere wiU be camping faciUlies available
lhe two of them, 52 years of dedicated on the fairgrourids. Should mot.,! acleadershlp has_been in their family . (That commocations be 'needed, there should be
is almost half the lime of the entire quite a lot of vacancies nearby.
duration of the Emancipation Itself).
The admission is free, but there wili be
Other presidents who have served are concession stands with dinners available.
Monroe Johnson, Thunnan Keels and .
F.O.C.U.S., Inc. (Friends Oi'ganlzed
Merriman Howell.
for Community Unity and Service) will
. As many as 1,600-2,000 people have have an arts and crafts display. 'lbe
attended thls program at one time. Places talents and abilities of many Blacks will be
as far away as California have been accented.
represented. As a matter of fact, the
The fairgrounds Is located on State
Emancipation sometimes is tho!Jilht of as Route 35, three mites northwest of
a "Homecoming" for this area. Along with Gallipolis, directly across from Holzer
paying tribute and acknowledgement to Medical Center. ·
the freedom of Blacks, guests have gained
Said Mrs. Thomas :
much from seeing their families and
"We are hoping that everyone will
friends. ·
make a special effort to come out this year
' This year the Emancipation will be to help commelli!ll'ate the first legal
held on the 19th of September at the Gallla document that was draWn up to grant the
County Fairgrounds. Mrs. Dorothy.g..!reedom that Blacks should have had from
Thomas and James Hogan are co- the start. Although we are still not where
chairpersons. Morning services will begin we should be, we have come a mighty long
at 10:30 a.m. with all of the local black way."

Second hundred
years to begin

at Rio Grande

boards."

Smith also said he knew nothing about
the Governor's so-ealled. "Emergency
Fund." That lund , however, must exist
since Senator Oakley Collins seems to
know a little about it.
In his effort to get help, Darnell has
talked to Sen . OJ!Uns, 92nd Representative
Ron James, Cong. Clarence E. Miller and
leaders In the Gallipolis Chamber of
Commerce, and Southeastern Ohio
Regional Oluncil. '
"They all seem to know our problem
and they sympathize with us, but that's as
·far as it goes.':
"Now Is the time to get something
going, our leaders are letting us down,. We
In GaWa Olunty are slipping backwards,"
Darnell emphasized.

Second advance of
fees made to GaUia
'

COLUMBUS - State Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson's office reported the second
advance distribution of 1976 state motor
vehicle registration fees totaling $30,91S to
Gallia County.
The distribution of license fees is
hased on a formula involving the number
of motor vehicles registered within a
county or municipality, number of -miles
and townships within a county and a big
county-small county equalization factor .
Area county distributions included
M~i:•s . !.22,728; Athens. $38,250: Jackson,
W.4;. -•nd Lawrence, $57,669.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande CollegeCommuni ty College will begin its second
century of service Monday, Sept. 13 when·
the studenl.&lt;! will enroll fo r the Fall
quarter , Academic Year 1976-77. According to Dean Brown, Director of Admissions, the enrollment should approach
the 1,000 mark.
Acting Academic Dean Sam Smith
said tha t many new course offerings would
be of interest lo the citizens of the four
county Community College District. Some
of those are Weaving, which will lie offered
on Monday each week from 6 to 6 p.m.
Chair Caning will also be given on Monday
each week from 6 to 8 p.m. Basic
Photography will be given each Monday
evening from 6 to 10 p.m. and Intermediate
Photography will be given on Tuesday
from I to S p.m.
For those interested in painting, Basic
Watercolors will be offered on Wed·
nesdays from 6 to 10 p.m. and Basic Oils
wlll be taught on Monday and Tuesday
from 8 to. 10 p.m. There will also be. a
course in Basic Ceramics. It will be of.
Cered on Thursdays from 6 to 10 p.m.
To accommodate the fast-growing
sport of tennis. the cplleges will o f~r a
course in tennis on Monday and Wednesday from 6to 7 p.m. Social Dance will
be taught on Tuesday and Thursday from
12:40 to 1:40 'p.m.
For the outdoo rsman, Canoeing,
Orienteering , and Sc uba Diving will be
. offered during this quarter. Canoeing will
be offered on Friday from I:50 to 4 p.m.,
(Continued on page 2)

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